Recently, I’ve been learning more about this subject. Today I came across the Decentralization Scoring System and it slapped me across the face.
Recently, I’ve been learning more about this subject. Today I came across the Decentralization Scoring System and it slapped me across the face.
If we’re talking takedown-resistance, we may need to enter the dark web realm:
FreeNetHyphanet is a 25+ years old distributed content system with limited support for servicesHosting distribution and localization varies, but they all have features to make it hard to pinpoint host and/or client locations.
Takedown resistance is a natural consequence of decentralization, but it’s not decentralization itself.
Technical means to evade takedown like you’re describing also tend to add complexity which reduces usability, whereas language support reduces complexity for speakers of the supported languages.
I think this scoring system is a little haphazard, and should probably be divided into multiple separate, parallel scores. Takedown resistance needs its own score, based on ability to integrate with anonymization tools, ownership of codebase, accessibility and security of dependencies, etc.