this post was submitted on 09 Mar 2025
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I have already looked through sites like those and have not found viable alternatives.
Because there aren't any.
This is a major issue with today's internet.
It's essential infrastructure for everyone on earth, but most of it depends on a few US corporations.
(Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Cloudflare, Meta)
Maybe this is a good "gap in the market" moment then - some global, at least not US-centric, CDN/DDOS-mitigation/edge-compute/WAN/DNS/registry competition to cloudflare's core tech. Maybe the way to increase the odds of success would be to develop an easy-install (integrated, containerised/packaged) FLOSS framework and federated control-protocol for those things with main target-userbase being IXPs around the world (yes, IXPs, not ISPs, which means it would all have to be free and open, and able to be deployed in a way that cost-handling doesn't put the IXPs in an awkward conflict-of-interest position). Importantly there is already a lot of FLOSS code available for much of this, so a large part of the work would be integration, UX, etc. Maybe it would then not need to "compete" with a behemoth like Cloudflare but instead iterate towards making some of it "default internet functionality", sidestepping it being opt-in/paid extras entirely. I know such a simplistic high-level definition sounds woefully naive, but I think starting there and discussing real-world details could lead to something...
Yeah, if AWS and Cloudflare alone go down, most people will think the whole internet is gone.
Let's be real - almost the whole internet will be down, then (or at least partially affected in one way or another)
A lot of old forums and personal website won't, but those are dropping off anyway. But yeah, most things whose devs/hosters are keeping up with trends, are using at least either Cloudflare or a major cloud compute provider, often both.