It’s all explained in the link I shared, you do like any other website but instead of using multiple servers owned by a single company it’s multiple servers owned by random people and devs can create a front-end to access the data found on those servers.
No, it’s not, each instance hosts its own content, and users are assigned to an instance.
What I’m talking about is making the end user experience the same as any centralized website, the hosts are just hosting parts of the total database (randomly assigned, with backups in mind so everything is hosted on multiple servers, with the option not to host content flagged as NSFW) and people create front-ends to access and interact with that database. Users aren’t assigned to a specific server, their credentials are just part of the database.
As I mentioned in my other comment, think like any other website but instead of relying on AWS to host the data on a bunch of servers all over the world, it’s people like you and me and just like Reddit before the API scandal, you let devs create apps to push and pull data.
From a user perspective that removes the admins from the equation entirely (people weren’t complaining about the sys admins on Reddit, they couldn’t care less about the servers), users are their own boss and filter their experience as they see fit, mods still exist but no one has the power to suddenly device you just can’t interact with tens of thousands of users all of the sudden just because you signed up from the wrong place (in their mind). If an admin decides to stop hosting, the data they had on their server is backed up on other servers and things are rebalanced between servers to make sure there’s still a backup of everything.
No instance, no admin with power over users themselves, only community mods.
Instances = servers. No instances = nowhere to host content. And again, admin roles are a necessity for any server based infrastructure.
There’s because you don’t understand the infrastructure I’m talking about.
Enlighten me. Where do you want to host stuff?
It’s all explained in the link I shared, you do like any other website but instead of using multiple servers owned by a single company it’s multiple servers owned by random people and devs can create a front-end to access the data found on those servers.
But that’s literally how the whole fediverse works right now.
No, it’s not, each instance hosts its own content, and users are assigned to an instance.
What I’m talking about is making the end user experience the same as any centralized website, the hosts are just hosting parts of the total database (randomly assigned, with backups in mind so everything is hosted on multiple servers, with the option not to host content flagged as NSFW) and people create front-ends to access and interact with that database. Users aren’t assigned to a specific server, their credentials are just part of the database.
As I mentioned in my other comment, think like any other website but instead of relying on AWS to host the data on a bunch of servers all over the world, it’s people like you and me and just like Reddit before the API scandal, you let devs create apps to push and pull data.
From a user perspective that removes the admins from the equation entirely (people weren’t complaining about the sys admins on Reddit, they couldn’t care less about the servers), users are their own boss and filter their experience as they see fit, mods still exist but no one has the power to suddenly device you just can’t interact with tens of thousands of users all of the sudden just because you signed up from the wrong place (in their mind). If an admin decides to stop hosting, the data they had on their server is backed up on other servers and things are rebalanced between servers to make sure there’s still a backup of everything.