Ask HN: What Happened to the P2P Revolution?
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It’s really hard to work around firewall restrictions in P2P.
I think that any successful P2P platform needs a central proxy to accommodate people behind CGNAT or who aren’t willing or able to poke holes in their firewall. Someone has to pay for that proxy.
I think latency is the biggest pain for everyone using a p2p platform.
In short: we (as humans) are unable to wait.
But for lots of open source things, we couldn't scale even if we wanted to, due to hosting costs. Imagine an open non-profit version of Instagram as an example, they spent what, $3 billion on AWS.
Peer to peer seems such an obvious solution to this, but somehow, it's failed to materialize as a widely employed technology. When I first heard of peertube, I thought "Finally! Someone is doing what must be a mix of Kazaa and youtube, where the videos are hosted by all the online computers" and boy was I dissapointed.
So, in short, why do you think we're not seeing p2p being widely deployed as an alternative to traditional hosting?