A comment from @disrooter from another thread;https://lemmy.ml/post/57418/comment/42932

"As someone who managed a PeerTube instance for a large YouTube channel I have to say the big problem is storage: how are you going to pay for storage that increases with each new video while the income is mostly the same? From a business point of view it’s a suicide.

Keep in mind content creators on YouTube produce many gigabytes/week. In a few years they would have to pay hundreds of dollars each week, even when they pause and not producing any new video, when they are getting less donations and so on.

Why should they invest so much money in a PeerTube instance? Only a premium pay-to-view service can justify it and you really need a high cost-to-produce-and-stream-the-video/minutes-of-video ratio to make it convenient, for example documentaries and not lazy records of hours of online debates." -end quote

This means that if avid content creators wants to host a peertube instance, they will be held back from doing it, because of how expensive it will be.

Just wanna talk about this issue, it deserves It’s own post. let me know what you think.

  • ufra@lemmy.ml
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    4 years ago

    great point. I created an account out curiosity on a random instance and it allowed me to upload 2 or 3 vids.

    Looking at digitalocean as an example it seems like one could get by on 50-100 a month.

    This might be a good opportunity for one of the altruistic organisations to make peertube hosting affordable. Someone like Mozilla but with more free cash flow.

    • Gwynne@lemmy.mlOP
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      4 years ago

      I had the same idea before, this is what I suggested; https://lemmy.ml/post/57418/comment/43067 the only thing we need is someone interested to make a video-streaming datacenter.

      This might be a good opportunity for one of the altruistic organisations to make peertube hosting affordable. Someone like Mozilla but with more free cash flow.

      definitely.