💾 Archived View for miguelmurca.flounder.online › gemlog › 2022-01-01.gmi captured on 2022-01-08 at 13:51:33. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
I was thinking about setting up a shared tilde with friends, but then I thought of something: I wouldn't be comfortable "owning" the server in which my friends participate, but I know for a fact that they probably don't have the technical expertise to manage it.
Ideally, there would be a democratic system set up, where I had root privileges but other users could vote such that a 2/3rds majority vote could boot me as a root user (and place another user in that place).
The tricky part is that even as a root user, the "president" could not have control over this system, or an elected manager could, well, impose a dictatorship.
Are there instances of democratic computer management? Sometimes I think about how, despite *vague gesture* democracy, most of our computer models are fairly (very, even) feudal.
An OVHCloud VPS is 3.50$/month. Maybe a fun experiment would be trying to create such a democratic tilde?
(please don't talk to me about the blockchain)