• Tobias Hunger
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    8 months ago

    It’s just a git repo, so it does not replace a forge. A forge provides a lot of services around the repo and makes the project discoverable for potential users. None of that is covered by this thing.

    I frankly see little value wrapping a decentralized version control system into layers of cryptography that hides where the data is actually stored (and how long it is going to be stored). Just mirror the repo a couple of times and you have pretty good protection against the code going offline again and you are done. No cryptography needed, and you get a lot of extras, too.

    If you do not like github: Use other forges. Self-host something, go to Codeberg or sourcehut, use something other than git like pijul or fossil, or whatever tickles your fancy. Unfortunately you will miss out on a lot of potential contributors and users there :-(

    • @egerlach@lemmy.ca
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      18 months ago

      Um… It’s literally hosting itself, complete with issues and PRs (which they call patches). So to me it seems to replace a forge.

      For private repos, it could be quite a good fit. No need for other contributors/users.