

A more neutral way to put it is that libertarianism and anarchism both value individual freedom, but differ on the role of the state.
Libertarians generally want a minimal state (for things like courts, police, national defense), while anarchists want to eliminate the state entirely.
There are also different kinds of anarchists—some are anti-capitalist, while others (like anarcho-capitalists) overlap more with libertarian ideas.






I run a modest Lemmy instance (lemmy.blehiscool.com). It’s not on the scale of lemmy.world or anything, but it’s been around long enough that I’ve had to deal with some real growth and scaling issues. I’ll try to focus on what actually matters in practice rather than theory.
Infrastructure
I’m running everything via Docker Compose on a single VPS (22GB RAM, 8 vCPU). That includes Postgres, Pictrs, and the Lemmy services.
This setup is great right up until it suddenly isn’t.
The main scaling issue I hit was federation backlog. At one point, the queue started piling up badly, and the fix was increasing federation worker threads (I’m currently at 128).
If you run into this, check your
lemmy_federatelogs—if you see:that’s your early warning sign.
What Actually Takes Time
Once your infrastructure is stable, the technical side becomes pretty low-effort.
The real time sink is moderation and community management. Easily 90% of the work.
On the technical side, my setup is pretty straightforward:
pg_dump+ VPS-level backupsBackups are boring right up until they aren’t. Test your restores. Seriously.
Where the Gaps Are
The main gaps I’ve run into:
Pictrs storage growth Images from federated content add up fast. Keep an eye on disk usage.
Postgres tuning As tables grow, default configs start to fall behind.
Federation queue visibility There’s no great built-in “at a glance” view—you end up relying on logs.
My Actual Workflow
Nothing fancy, just consistent habits:
Daily (quick check):
Weekly:
Monthly:
As needed:
What I’d Do Differently
If I were starting over:
TL;DR
Happy to answer specifics if you’re planning a setup—there’s a lot of small gotchas that only show up once you’ve been running things for a while.