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Who owns the servers for Lemmy?

Trying to wrap my head around the fediverse. Is each instance like another person with a server? Could that person just shut it down whenever they wanted to?

Are there any companies that have invested in hosting Lemmy/ other fediverse servers?

Sorry I'm sure I messed up some of the terminology, I hope my questions make sense! I love the idea of the fediverse as I understand it, but I like to dig into these details.

61 comments
  • If you created a Lemmy server, then you would be the owner of that particular instance, and yet another node in the fediverse. It's not owned by anyone, really. The entire point of activitypub is that it's entirely agnostic.

    • Of course the servers are ownes by someone, what are you talking about? The thing is just that not all servers belong to one entity. So lemmy couldn't be turned off because one person decides so.

      • I think you misunderstood the person above you. The servers are owned by someone, but the Fediverse as a whole isn’t. You’re both saying the same thing ☺️

  • Is each instance like another person with a server?

    Individual person, group of people, nonprofit, company, governments, political parties, whatever. Anything goes.

    Could that person just shut it down whenever they wanted to?

    Yes. That's why it's advisable to join one with a dedicated group of committed individuals, or run your own. Joining super small servers might sound nice, but the owners might just ditch it.

    Are there any companies that have invested in hosting Lemmy/ other fediverse servers?

    There are some run by companies, yes, for example social.bbc which is run by the British Broadcasting Corporation. gruene.social is run by the Greens (political party) in Germany, and social.overheid.nl is operated by the Dutch government.

    There will probably be some company-run instances that don't allow user signup, since all they do is feredate with everyone and exfiltrate data. It's what people do...

  • More than the developers of Lemmy, you're putting your trust in the instance owner/admin. Even if the site says "v0.19.3" at the bottom, there could be any code put in there by the server admin. This can be for better or worse, for example in lemm.ee the admin has frequently included code improvements that have made this instance more resilient than others. I'm not aware of any instance including malicious exploits, but in theory this would be possible. If one was caught doing this it would likely be defederated by others.

    Is each instance like another person with a server?

    Yes. However the instance admin and server admin might be different people. The server admin is probably also an instance admin, but some people might only be instance admin.

    Could that person just shut it down whenever they wanted to?

    Yes, the server admin has complete control. Instance admin have control within the instance, they can remove just about everything but they can't quite flip a switch and turn it off.

    Are there any companies that have invested in hosting Lemmy/ other fediverse servers?

    Facebook/Meta came in with Threads, but most instances refused to federate with them. I think the BBC also set up a Mastadon instance, they ran a trial which has either been extended or made permanent. There may be others, but the whole point of federation is that anyone can make an instance, be they private individuals or corporations. The big downside is that any instance then becomes another place to remove your content from - but really this is true of any website, which might be scraped by a 3rd party.

  • It would depend on the instance.

    There's a lot of self-hosting enthusiasts here so I would assume at least some are owned by the instance admins themselves. But I would also guess some others use a 3rd party service and technically do not own the server they rent.

    If I was to host my own instance, I would end up renting something because I don't have the UP speed to really run a webserver on my home internet. Nor the capacity on my one computer to handle any storage for people to do anything.

61 comments