Lemmygrad can’t be banned - first of all it’s all federated. Even if lemmygrad stopped existing, every post that’s federated on the dozens of instance we are linked with would still be up. You can’t take down the federated web unless you take down every single federated website. Moreover, lemmygrad is self-hosted. Being self-hosted, the website can also be brought back very quickly. This is the case for any self-hosted website if you run daily backups like you should be doing anyway.
Independently hosted Internet communities like Lemmygrad are in a much better place than communities which exist as “guests” on corporate platforms like Reddit or Facebook, but we need to be thoughtful about this. This is not a problem which can be solved simply by renting dozens of VPSs. The Internet is not magic. It is composed of data centers, routing hubs, high capacity back-bones, last mile ISPs. The vast majority of the network is privately owned. Many aspects of the network are totally monopolized. There are many ways control can be exerted over it. As ecosystems like the Fediverse continue to grow, we will see this power exerted in new and unprecedented ways. Always be prepared.
i’ve been concerned about this as well and as a non-tech savvy person, it’s hard to figure out how to even learn about ways around it. techie stuff is aggressively gatekept - in fact, i came across some interesting articles about LoRa communications and Reticulum Network, but i can’t find anything written up that doesn’t assume a certain level competence or background in tech - so i tried to ask in a socialist prepper subreddit, where i was told that i should not be interested unlearning about Reticulum Network because it’s way too advanced and only hardcore techies are capable of using that.
but anyway - wrt the concern of privatized internet infrastructure, i think that Reticulum thingie could be promising if the nerds ever start sharing their toys with us lolol
in fact, i came across some interesting articles about LoRa communications and Reticulum Network, but i can’t find anything written up that doesn’t assume a certain level competence or background in tech - so i tried to ask in a socialist prepper subreddit, where i was told that i should not be interested unlearning about Reticulum Network because it’s way too advanced and only hardcore techies are capable of using that.
A good background for this specific case would be amateur radio. I actually bumped into the guy developing Reticulum on some IRC channel years ago. It is pretty much just an experimental bespoke mesh networking protocol invented by some guy. I was interested as well, but I did not have the knowhow or the hardware to try it out at the time. On paper it looked like a great improvement from the packet networks in use on the ham bands today.
The best approach to get into this sort of thing would be to study for an amateur radio license test, get on the air and try contacting some stations on established packet networks (APRS being the most common, but there are allegedly still some packet BBSes still running), then learn how to set up a custom encodings on top of this hardware one you’ve proven it.
LoRas are a proprietary system, but it’s capabilities can be well understood from a general understanding of the principles and practical aspects of radio communication.
Independently hosted Internet communities like Lemmygrad are in a much better place than communities which exist as “guests” on corporate platforms like Reddit or Facebook, but we need to be thoughtful about this. This is not a problem which can be solved simply by renting dozens of VPSs. The Internet is not magic. It is composed of data centers, routing hubs, high capacity back-bones, last mile ISPs. The vast majority of the network is privately owned. Many aspects of the network are totally monopolized. There are many ways control can be exerted over it. As ecosystems like the Fediverse continue to grow, we will see this power exerted in new and unprecedented ways. Always be prepared.
i’ve been concerned about this as well and as a non-tech savvy person, it’s hard to figure out how to even learn about ways around it. techie stuff is aggressively gatekept - in fact, i came across some interesting articles about LoRa communications and Reticulum Network, but i can’t find anything written up that doesn’t assume a certain level competence or background in tech - so i tried to ask in a socialist prepper subreddit, where i was told that i should not be interested unlearning about Reticulum Network because it’s way too advanced and only hardcore techies are capable of using that.
but anyway - wrt the concern of privatized internet infrastructure, i think that Reticulum thingie could be promising if the nerds ever start sharing their toys with us lolol
They made social media apps so dumb, we became dumber with them.
A good background for this specific case would be amateur radio. I actually bumped into the guy developing Reticulum on some IRC channel years ago. It is pretty much just an experimental bespoke mesh networking protocol invented by some guy. I was interested as well, but I did not have the knowhow or the hardware to try it out at the time. On paper it looked like a great improvement from the packet networks in use on the ham bands today.
The best approach to get into this sort of thing would be to study for an amateur radio license test, get on the air and try contacting some stations on established packet networks (APRS being the most common, but there are allegedly still some packet BBSes still running), then learn how to set up a custom encodings on top of this hardware one you’ve proven it.
LoRas are a proprietary system, but it’s capabilities can be well understood from a general understanding of the principles and practical aspects of radio communication.
i downloaded the ARRL Ham Radio Licensing Manual and I do plan to get into it once i find safe/stable housing (currently homeless)