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We moved our Bluesky data to Eurosky

118 pointsby dotcomatoday at 3:17 PM99 commentsview on HN

Comments

pelagicAustraltoday at 3:39 PM

I'm left wondering if maybe all the years I spend tinkering with Linux servers and self-hosted infrastructure are just about to pay off big time now that there is a massive move for governments and institutions to take control of their infrastructure... You still pretty much need a human to spin and maintain infrastructure, wire things securely, and monitor... Now I just need to wait until someone rebrands sysop into something cool sounding like Sovereign Re-orchestration Professional, or Reacquisition Specialist... Data Nationalisation Champion

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goody71today at 3:40 PM

So the "news" here is they're hosting their own PDS? I think that was the main point of Atmosphere and Bluesky was just a popular gateway to get people into it.

Unless I'm missing something else...

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nottorptoday at 5:57 PM

But ... they have a "Follow us on BlueSky" link that goes to bsky.app not esky.something?

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jacobgoldtoday at 3:55 PM

This is great. The entire idea of AT is that users can move their data for any reason. We want more of this.

But I do think it's always worth pushing back a bit on this idea:

> "The way Bluesky is funded is at odds with the idea of decentralisation because the platform relies on venture capital and operates under a shareholder model."

Large decentralized infrastructure like the internet, DNS, email, and the web was largely built by VC-backed companies.

The most important open source project, Linux, is funded by major tech companies through the Linux Foundation, with $311 million last year.

Corporate incentives do create conflicts, so it makes sense to be paranoid and skeptical. But the idea that companies can't contribute to open and decentralized systems is exactly the wrong lesson to learn.

We want more VC-backed startups working on open social networks and protocols. It would be great if many of them were in Europe.

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jrm4today at 3:51 PM

And what does this do safety/privacy-wise?

Nothing, except make it more available.

This is why I often argue against (or at least want to point out the dangers of) the ATProto/Bluesky model.

It's an absolute boon for people who want heavy surveillance, government or otherwise.

The looseness and "unreliability" of protocols like Mastodon ironically make them safer.

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cloudshocktoday at 5:29 PM

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CurbStompertoday at 4:23 PM

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curtisblainetoday at 4:26 PM

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impulser_today at 4:00 PM

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theplumbertoday at 3:47 PM

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