This doesn't really fit the sub since that is basically for things you run at home.
Its more about the idea of "If you don't run it yourself, you don't own it" kind of thing.
Archive: https://archive.today/5Q2hl
From the post:
>In recent months, stories like Slack's licensing changes have highlighted just how fragile our control over data can be when it lives entirely in someone else's cloud. Prices go up, features disappear, APIs change, and suddenly you no longer own the tools - or even the history - your business relies on.
At Namhost, we've always believed that the surest way to guarantee ownership of your data is to self-host it. With Namhost hosting, that means your site or system runs on servers you control, with dual-location backups and the ability to move your data to another server or provider whenever you choose. The server is yours, the backups are yours, and the rules are yours.
This doesn't really fit the /s/selfhosted sub since that is basically for things you run at home.
Its more about the idea of "If you don't run it yourself, you don't own it" kind of thing.
Archive: https://archive.today/5Q2hl
From the post:
>>In recent months, stories like Slack's licensing changes have highlighted just how fragile our control over data can be when it lives entirely in someone else's cloud. Prices go up, features disappear, APIs change, and suddenly you no longer own the tools - or even the history - your business relies on.
At Namhost, we've always believed that the surest way to guarantee ownership of your data is to self-host it. With Namhost hosting, that means your site or system runs on servers you control, with dual-location backups and the ability to move your data to another server or provider whenever you choose. The server is yours, the backups are yours, and the rules are yours.
(post is archived)