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I've been building a project to preserve family voices, stories, photos, and history, and one question has influenced almost every design decision:

Should something this personal ever require people to trust someone else's servers?

That's what pushed me toward making it open source and fully self-hostable. If someone wants to keep their family's memories on hardware they own, they should be able to.

That said, I know not everyone wants to run a server, so I'm also offering a managed hosted version. The idea isn't to lock anyone into a platform or build another big cloud service—it simply helps fund the project for people who'd rather not manage the infrastructure themselves.

For those of you who self-host, I'm curious:

Would you actually self-host something this personal?

What would make you trust (or distrust) a project like this?

What are some mistakes you've seen developers make when they say they support self-hosting?

I'm genuinely interested in hearing how this community thinks about it before I finish everything up.

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[-] sobchak@programming.dev 1 points 1 day ago

I don't really store stuff like this (well, I do use immich). If I really cared about this kind of stuff, I'd probably self-host, but encrypt archives and backup to cloud storage. For small files (e.g. documents/text), I used to use Syncthing, since it was unlikely that all my devices would get destroyed at the same time, but now I just use Proton Drive since I'm already paying for email and VPN.

A project like this would need to be open source, and encryption needs to happen client-side for trust.

Docker (and in my case, TrueNAS apps), with a single data volume to backup makes things a lot easier.

[-] preludeofme@lemmy.world 2 points 23 hours ago

Yeah I was shopping the same, but found I wanted something more specific to family, and something that would be easier for my family to setup and use. That's the hardest part about self hosting is that sometimes it's really hard to setup for regular users and I can't get my family to use it. Of it's not just a sign in button it's too much for non-technical people

I'm trying to make sure that I have everything encrypted and secure. I just got it (I think) ready for public scrutiny [gulp]. So we will see but it is open source

this post was submitted on 10 Jul 2026
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