this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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Lemmy and personal forums have a similar issue though. Just like users were previously at the whim of the large company to provide service, now they rely on you. What if you were to get board of running the forum or (however terrible) something were to happen to you?
Now the site and all of it's content is lost for the users permanently. Lemmy instances also have this problem. They rely entirely on a single administrator, (or small group of them). In the Web1.0 days this wasn't such a large issue, because websites were most often read-only for content consumption and web forums were small and populated by niche tech savvy people. These days however, the users create a lot of the content that is hosted and they naturally expect it to persist.
Lemmy needs some way of allowing users to port their profile and content from one instance to another, and a redundancy system where instances can partner with others to host data for redundancy purposes, or something to that effect. Maybe users pay a small hosting fee for their own content and it's not tied to an instance? Though I'm not sure how that would work, I'm just spitballing.
There's a lot of problems to solve, and this fediverse is a very interesting idea, but it's not perfect and introduces a lot of questions. I don't want perfect to be the enemy of good, but I'm not sure entrusting the longevity of the content to admins of a particular server is the best plan.
You're correct, though my forum could be archived on the Internet archive (I'm not sure if it is, but it could be).
I agree with your general point though, there are still single points of failure in Lemmy.