@ClickyMcTicker @marielgm @evacide
You kind of get that at a coarse level by joining a geographically local instance if one exists
@gbargoud
> You kind of get that at a coarse level by joining a geographically local instance if one exists
... or if it doesn't, by helping to start one, and recruiting locals to set up accounts there, even if only to post about local stuff. Ideally including public organisations and media outlets.
Toot.wales and their Tŵt Cymru is a great Proof of Concept for what can be done.
@wayubi
> Letting big tech companies host and own your accounts was a mistake
Agreed.
> In the early days we hosted our own stuff, our own websites, email, etc
This is a common legend, not entirely true. It was quite normal in the 1990s to trust hosting of email, etc, to institutions with which we had a direct relationship; universities, ISPs, etc. The move to hosting by faceless platforms like Yahoo, Hotmail, EGroups, etc, began in the late 1990s, as the DotCom bubble inflated.
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@wayubi
> I used to host my own stuff on bluehost and geocities
Good for you. I had a website in the late 1990s on Orcon's gratis hosting, which I made using NVu and uploaded over FTP with Filezilla. But this style of self-hosting wasn't universal ever. As I say community-hosting by a trusted org was just as common, if not more common.
@wayubi
> I'm sorry your memory is failing you, it happens with age
I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt, and presume that was intended as light-hearted humour. But FYI that kind of joke doesn't always land when posting in a text-only medium, or when talking to strangers, and especially when you're doing both.
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It's akin to the way obtain veges. It's true we haven't always relied on corporations to supply them. Some people still grow their own, and it's true that a generation ago more of us did that. But even then, plenty of people got at least some of our veges from local greengrocers, farners markets, and small, locally-owned supermarkets.
Some of us are lucky enough to still have such things, and increasing the availability of them is just as valid as a way of de-corporatising vege supply.