this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2024
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While reading many of the blogs and posts here about self hosting, I notice that self hosters spend a lot of time searching for and migrating between VPS or backup hosting. Being a cheapskate, I have a raspberry pi with a large disk attached and leave it at a relative's house. I'll rsync my backup drive to it nightly. The problem is when something happens, I have to walk them through a reboot or do troubleshooting over the phone or worse, wait until a holiday when we all meet.

What would a solution look like for a bunch of random tech nerds who happen to live near each other to cross host each other's offsite backups? How would you secure it, support it or make it resilient to bad actors? Do you think it could work? What are the drawbacks?

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Comedy NNTP option here.

It's an established, stable, understood and very very thoroughly debugged and tested protocol/server solution that'll run on a potato and has clients for every OS you've ever heard of, and a bunch you haven't.

Setting up your own little mini-network and sharing groups is fairly trivial and it'll happily shove copies of everyone's data to every server that's on the feed.

Just encrypt your shit, post it, and let the software do the rest.

(I mean, if it's good enough to move 200TB of perfectly legitimate Linux ISOs a day, it'll handle however much data you could possibly be backing up.)

Disclaimer: it's not quite that simple, but I mean, it's pretty close to. Also I'm very much a UNIX boomer and am a big fan of the simplest solution that's got the longest tested history over shiny new shit, so just making that bias clear.