I’m fairly new and don’t 100% understand it yet, but instances are run on servers that require money. Are we heading towards seeing ads or subscriptions to raise funds instead of relying on donations to cover overhead?

Especially with the influx of new users. Hardware upgrades are needed.

  • @kinsnik
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    11 year ago

    I do have a question about how the instances and federation would work. If you are in an instance like lemmy.world, and it is federating with any other instance, then the content is being loaded from some other server, right? so if there is a large server with millions of users, could that server federate with a small server that isn’t ready to handle the traffic of millions of users and basically kill it? or the server has a way to prevent being federated into another instance?

    i am still trying to learn about fediverse

    • @Flemmy
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      41 year ago

      Nah, that’s not quite right.

      Tiny federates with huge - nothing happens, they just exchange metadata. Dancer@tiny subs to something on huge - now you have one community, with a lot of updates, coming at tiny. Maybe it drops some. Still not an issue

      Hugo@huge subs to something on tiny - now something@tiny is cached on huge, still not a problem.

      Now something@tiny is in the feed on huge. A million people comment. This is a problem… For huge mostly. Over at little, people are commenting on something@tiny. They might see doubled up comments or orphaned comments, but mostly they just don’t see most of the stuff from huge

      So generally, it’s not an issue. In certain situations, there will be hiccups, but it will keep chugging along

    • @hydra
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      21 year ago

      I think the small instance can temporarily defederate to reduce the load. kbin.social had to do this during the first reddit exodus because they grew too much too fast and couldn’t handle the load.