Can’t a corporation just enter the space whenever they want to? Can’t they start or even buy out larger instances? Even if Lemmy does take off, wouldn’t this inevitably happen anyway if the space gets popular enough?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    111 year ago

    Lemmy allows using any smtp server to send emails. Can use Googles servers, fastmails servers etc.

    It’s different from running your own email server. If you run your own, then Google and the others are definently not going to trust it. There are lots of blog posts about the pain of running your own email server.

    • @Aux
      link
      111 year ago

      There are literally no problems running your own server if you comply with anti spam measures.

        • @Aux
          link
          71 year ago

          You shouldn’t run email server from a residential IP address. That’s one of the conditions how you comply with anti spam measures.

          • ?? then clearly, i CANNOT run an email server? without buying my way into a higher status of ip address?

            i can host fedi from residential ip’s, and that’s a huge part why it’s possible for us to talk right now (of course, i need cloudflares help for this, since i have no ipv4 address - but other than that)

            • @Aux
              link
              111 year ago

              I don’t see this as a problem. It’s not like VPS is a luxury and costs a fortune. You’ll waste more money on powering your PC 24/7.

              • A VPS is basically just a complicated way of making an account with a large infrastructure provider imo if i can’t have a raspberry pi, that costs only electricity, and have it host an email server

                the protocol is not open! at least it is more closed than i’d like - it’s open enough for companies, granted

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  21 year ago

                  If I have to have a computer, imo it’s not open. It should just be in the air or it’s literally an impossible barrier for anyone to get past.

                  • Joseph Grimaldi [Nikola Orsinov]
                    link
                    fedilink
                    English
                    01 year ago

                    ?? This is clearly not what i’m saying. Residential Hosting is technically possible - everything works as intended, it’s just that a tiny bit of extra logic on the recievers side rejects the delivery.

                    That’s very different from…? Demanding the air? Hosts it?

                    I just think the requirement is red tape, and i have no idea why yall are so ready to accept, that you shouldn’t own the machienes you run your code on, if you’re not a company.

                    Suree, i am a bit oblivious, it may be that it’s as “easy” as calling your isp. It’s just that my isp never picks up, and sends the pinkertons after me to get me to stop calling.

                • @Aux
                  link
                  01 year ago

                  I don’t know how much electricity costs where you live, but running a RasPi 24/7 would cost around £2 per month here. Then you also need to factor in internet costs, backups, maintenance, etc. You can get a VPS from £5 per month with everything included. You can get something even cheaper if you really want to. There’s literally no point running anything at home, except for Home Assistant.

                  And yes, everything is open. You just want weird things.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              21 year ago

              Not that guy but I see the confusion here. What he really means is self host which could mean running something in your garage or could mean running something on a VPS as long as you’re doing it yourself. You can definitely self host email. You can even run it in your garage you just need to tunnel through a VPS or something with a non residential IP.

              • Suree in the grand sheme of things getting a non-residential ip shouldn’t be too hard

                But i still think it’s one of those pieces of red tape that have killed a lot of diversity

                This is absolutely a reason to close your home server -i mean if you’re buying an VPS anyway that uses the same bandwidth it would use with the server set up there

                Why keep a server in your garage? And then you’re not truely independent anymore, because of a small policy somewhere

                I DO think garage hosting is an important part of an ecosystems freedom.

                I can garage host fedi, and i AM in this very moment. For web services it’s just DOS Protection that we need Men in the Middle for. Which is sad but, actually not an artificial requirement.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  11 year ago

                  I do agree, but at this point most residential connections are probably behind CGNAT so wouldn’t even have a public IP associated with just their connection anymore. You can always buy a business line and have them connect it up to your home. I think that would also give you a non residential IP?

                  • I am hosting this server behind a dynamic ipb6 address, which a script send to the cloudflare api every time it changes

                    As long as you have a DSLite ipv6 non-nat address, you can be on the web - with compromises xD

                    My parents are still behind a dynamic ipv4, which is not behind a NAT

        • @Aux
          link
          81 year ago

          You need a fixed, non-residential IP address. You need a domain name with SPF. You need to set up DKIM. And you need to set up DMARC.

          In theory, you only need DMARC, but some old email software somewhere might not support it.

          And then you can use services like https://www.mail-tester.com/ to check if everything is set up correctly.

    • @Bluetreefrog
      link
      8
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      I’ve had hosted email from a service provider for years and never had a problem. I’m not talking anyone big here.