• @webjukebox@lemmy.world
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      531 year ago

      Just like the good old times of internet. When every kid had a hobby and installed a forum software into a shared hosting to spend time with others. “If you build it, he/they will come.”

      • The only thing that sucked about having my own PHPBB forum was the lack of actual users to communicate with.

        But it looked and did everything just the way I wanted, so that was nice. 🥹

          • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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            1 year ago

            The places I used to hang out with PHPBB or similar forums never really had problems with bots. And I’m at least pretty sure they were popular places. Penny-Arcade, Something Awful, NewGrounds, eBaums World…

            They also weren’t a problem for small users either. Not only was there no incentive, they didn’t necessarily get discovered by web crawlers. I remember wondering why my websites never showed up on search engines when I first started fucking around with webpages, web hosting, networks, etc. I hosted the server, I had a domain name, I was online and could access my site from other computers solely through the internet; but it never came up on Yahoo or Dogpile and I didn’t know why. The first time I ever found my own site on a search engine, it was using a hosting site like Geocities. And that was after Google came out and I was getting archived versions of the first website I ever made.

      • @dustojnikhummer@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        Sadly public self hosting comes with a lot of legalities. And sure, I can hide behind cloudflare ( and I do) but that still puts all of my eggs into Cloudflare’s basket

    • mrdelmo
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      321 year ago

      it really does feel like a return to the older decentralized web