Comment by Calzifer
21 hours ago
> Data centers are built with redundant network connectivity, backup power, and fire suppression. [...] The question is their relative frequency, which is where the data center is far superior.
Well, I remember one incident were a 'professional' data center burned down including the backups.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OVHcloud#Incidents
I know no such incident for some basement hosting.
Doesn't mean much. I'm just a bit surprised so many people are worried because of the server location and no one had mentioned yet the quite outstanding OVH incident.
I'm not going to pretend datacenters are magical places immune to damage. I worked at a company where the 630 Third Street datacenter couldn't keep temperatures stable during a San Francisco heatwave and the Okex crypto exchange has experienced downtime because the Alibaba Zone C datacenter their matching engine is on experienced A/C failure. So it's not all magic, but if you didn't encounter home-lab failure it's because you did not sample the population appropriately.
https://www.reddit.com/r/homelab/comments/wvqxs7/my_homelab_...
I don't have a bone to pick here. If F-Droid wants to free-ball it I think that's fine. You can usually run things for max cheap by just sticking them on a residential Google Fiber line in one of the cheap power states and then just making sure your software can quickly be deployed elsewhere in times of outage. It's not a huge deal unless you need always-on.
But the arguments being made here are not correct.
Surely "Juan's home server in basement burns down" would make the headlines. You're totally right.