This is a pretty great, long form post about the structure of Bluesky, and how it’s largely kinda pretending to be decentralized at the moment. I’m not trying to make a dig at it. I’ve enjoyed the platform myself for a while, but it’s good to learn more about how it actually works.

This article was shared on Mastodon via its author here.

  • I saw a comment the other day about this saying you’d need like over 4terrabytes of storage to run a BlueSky instance of your own, and that it’s growing every day. That’s fucking insane.

    • @garretble@lemmy.worldOP
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      174 months ago

      That’s addressed in the blog post. She was saying it was currently 5TB and growing. So anyone wanting to set up a server would need to pay for that space, and that’s not cheap.

      • @doggle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 months ago

        It’s also not, like, unattainable

        But it’s definitely well beyond what any hobbyist is going to set up in a whim

        • @eleitl@lemm.ee
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          34 months ago

          Meh, homelab storage and FTTH are reasonably cheap. Or rented iron like Hetzner.

    • @zarkanian@sh.itjust.works
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      54 months ago

      I thought it takes that much storage to run a relay, not an instance. (Which Bluesky calls a “Personal Data Store.”)

      Maybe this is just my ignorance showing, but this seems like a really archaic way to design something like this in 2024. Dump all the data into a central repository and then have clients pull from that?