I know there’s donations and the owners can use their own money, but there’s a limit. I doubt a platform with hundreds of thousands of daily users can survive with only donations.

  • @fubo@lemmy.world
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    271 year ago

    Why? A single Linux server has been able to support tens of thousands of simultaneous clients for many years now.

      • TrenchcoatFullOfBats
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        81 year ago

        The €5/mo VPS my instance runs on has 20TB bandwidth included.

        So while it is not free, it can certainly be very, very inexpensive.

      • @mrmanagerA
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        1 year ago

        It’s super cheap. A lot of us nerds have very good incomes and can pay for an instance that has like 20 TB of network traffic for less than 10 dollars per month.

        It’s our way to try and contribute to the growth of Lemmy and also it’s fun to run our own instance.

        Edit: Corrected network bandwidth amount.

        • @remkit@lemmy.kya.moe
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          31 year ago

          What? Did you mean 40Gbps for less than 10 dollars/mo? Or did you mean 40GB of traffic total monthly? Huh?

            • @remkit@lemmy.kya.moe
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              11 year ago

              Sure, that’s fair, but it’s also in a region where typical egress costs are cheap anyways. It’ll be harder to find something like this in say, the SEA or OC regions.

        • @mrmanagerA
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          1 year ago

          I think this doesn’t apply? Aren’t they talking about 10k simultaneously connected users here? With http you connect and disconnect for every request.

          Also the database is likely to give timeout errors way before you reach the socket limits.