I'm looking into hosting my personal instance of some fediverse software. I want to do it to grow my tech-literacy more than to host my own service. So I want to pick one in the fediverse, because I love the federation concept, but I'm open to a software I don't use yet.
I have made previous attempt at hosting internet services a few years ago, mainly things my teachers told me to do. It was a big failure and I mostly remember from it that I got a hard time understanding instructions given on internet tutorials or at which point what I did was different from what my classmates did :(
But I want to try again and do better! đ€
I plan on hosting it on a old laptop I hope not to break completely and maby in a docker container (but I also used to have a hard time with docker)
What fediverse software would you recommend me? Is there one that is easier to install than another? Or one with more clear installation instructions?
One important thing to check up on before you start is weather your ISP permits hosting servers at home to not.
Any port you open in your router will quickly be found and you WILL get attacked, this is automated and often called the background noise of the internet.
Your IP WILL show up on sites like Shodan, and depending on your ISP they may also find it. You need to read up on what your ISP permits you to do with their internet connection.
Normally it is chill, as long as you don't cause issues for the ISP they don't really care, but if your service starts attracting traffic, attack will increase and so might the issues your ISP see.
I donât think anyone opens a port directly to the application. One should use a reserve proxy manager such as NPM. Further security such as authentik. And maybe even cloudflare proxy for hiding oneâs IP.
Also, what ISP cares about hosting other then frequent IP changes which duckdns solves? Is this for a specific company or country?
Gonna get a lot of hate for this but if it's just a laptop then you'll have a lot more benefit to journalists/activists if you do a tor exit node. Or tor relay node. Or just an i2p node.