this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2023
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I know there's donations and the owners can use their own money, but there's a limit. I doubt a platform with hundreds of thousands of daily users can survive with only donations.

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[–] Aidan@lemm.ee 17 points 1 year ago (14 children)

I think we’ll see a variety of servers with different funding models, similar to how radio and tv stations in the us can have a variety of funding models. NPR has a network of member stations that all carry their content (if the stations want, or they can get content from another station, or they can make it themselves).

Threads is an example of a federated service with a corporate funding model. I definitely think it’ll survive since they have as much money as Facebook wants to sink into it.

But we’ll probably also see servers that run on donations by a dedicated community.

If Threads is the NBC/CBS/ABC of the federated landscape, then those small servers will be like public radio stations, which operate on donations and the occasional government grant.

I think there are people who would chip in a little bit to fund a non-commercial server just the same as there are people who chip in money to NPR.

[–] sjatar@sjatar.net 11 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (12 children)

I'm posting from a self hosted server running on a raspberry pi! While no long term test has been carried out yet, it's really snappy :3

I wonder how the network will scale if more and more would self-hosts small instances with just 2-4 users. If it would decrease load or increase load on the instances that hold popular communities.

[–] insomniac@vlemmy.net 4 points 1 year ago

I guess you’re a HAM radio operator in this analogy

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