Slowly exploring the lemmy ecosystem, since I don’t want to use reddit, and was wondering if selfhosting would be a good idea?

  • lotanis
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    2 years ago

    It means that you aren’t subject to anyone else’s decision making or the effects of that like defederation. But obviously there are implications on cost and work for you

  • frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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    2 years ago

    There are two big benefits in my opinion.

    1. Speed and responsiveness. When the bigger instances were (or are) overloaded, my Lemmy experience was still fast and snappy. Content was slower to update for those big instances, but navigating Lemmy itself was still fine, and it gave me an opportunity to engage with some smaller communities.

    2. Control of federation. I decide who to federate with, and as long as I follow other instance and community rules, I won’t get defederated.

    The biggest downside is that I can’t discover new communities organically since I’m the only real active user of my instance. Nothing new gets federated unless I seek it out. But I solve that by using a fediverse indexer every week or so to search for popular or interesting communities.

    • フ卂ㄖ卄乇卂卄@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      But I solve that by using a fediverse indexer every week or so to search for popular or interesting communities.

      Is there a way to automatically federate with other instances? Because I started my own Lemmy instance, and its annoying having to manually go to every community in order to federate with it. (The instance is for my own personal use, so I won’t be opening registrations)

      • frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Absolutely, there are two tools I use to do so.

        1. Lemmy Community Seeder - Very customizable tool that by default grabs the top 50 posts in the top 50 communities of the specified instances every few hours.

        2. Lemmony - Less customizable tool that by default grabs pretty much everything. Probably less ideal for larger or more active instances, but my instance has 5 or 6 users, only a couple of which are active, so this tool has been awesome for populating my “All” feed.

        I recommend creating a non-admin bot account and using that for these tools.

        • hamburglar26@wilbo.tech
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          1 year ago

          Badass thanks for this. I’ve enjoyed kinda keeping my instance more catered but starting to want to at least have more available and just subscribe to the stuff I want to see regularly.

  • KNova@links.dartboard.social
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    2 years ago

    You end up as the ultimate decider on what you federate with. If you join someone else’s community you might not agree with their administration or moderation decisions.

    It’s a fun exercise in system administration, it taught me some new things. It got me interested in Rust as a programming language (not that you need to know that to run an instance - I was just tinkering w: source code)

  • zephyr@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago
    • More private, if you’re overly conscious about your IP being tracker by instance host
    • You own your data
    • You can experiment with alpha releases
    • You can customize everything. Default CSS, javascript, etc
    • You can’t be censored (only defederated)
    • JetpackJackson@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      Not the OP, but can you move your account to a private instance or is it not possible at the moment?

      • Triage8420@lemmy.ml
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        2 years ago

        It’s not possible at the moment. Lemmy devs acknowledged it was a widely requested feature but last I read, they were focused on maintaining the performance of Lemmy during the spike of users during the great Reddit migration.

  • chris@l.roofo.cc
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    2 years ago

    Yes. I am immune from the beehaw/lemmy.world drama or similar. I can block instances as I please and I can tinker with my instance.

      • deejay4am@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        Eh, kinda. lemmy doesn’t have super great moderation tools yet, and the influx of users on lemmy.world and lemmy.ml included people posting some content that was against beehaw’s moderation guidelines. Rather than deal with being overwhelmed without much option, they decided to temporarily defederate until there was a clear path to resolving the issue (i.e. better mod tools).

        I think people are making it out to be a bigger deal than it really is, and those flames are probably being stoked by the trolls.

        There are plenty of “no actually assault weapons are good for society” and “actually Ukraine is the aggressor” groypers around now, but I guess that just means Lemmy is getting popular enough to attract the masses - which in the end is a net positive.

    • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.ml
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      2 years ago

      I can tinker with my instance.

      I didn’t even find a SANE way to set it up with Docker without having to tinker with the instance. I just want a container not generating half a dozen of other containers and volumes.

      • Fauxreigner@lemmy.fauxreigner.net
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        2 years ago

        A single container for everything gets away from the point of containerization. If you have a single container for lemmy-ui, lemmy backend, and postgres, you need to rebuild that container whenever any one of those applications gets an update, and they could start to interfere with each other. Keeping them in separate containers makes everything a lot cleaner, it just requires something like docker compose to put it all together.

        Did you try the Ansible install? Provided you’re installing onto a supported Debian/Ubuntu version, I found it fairly straightforward.

        • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.ml
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          2 years ago

          I see the container thing a little different. A container should contain all things that are needed to run the containered application (and if it is a web application then exposing one single port). Creating containers should not create multiple other containers ( have no other use for) or networks, or volumes.