naturalplastic wrote:
In what sense is the Web "centralized" in the first place?
I'm just spitballing here:
It's not that the Internet itself is centralized, per se, but rather any given website is effectively self-contained. Anyone can visit, but the site itself is located on a select set of servers. Ever get an error message (Wrong Planet has had cloud errors before)?
REAL WORLD example: It's like, anyone can come into the store, but the store itself is owned and controlled by one person. If they don't show up for work that day, the store is locked, and you can't get it. If the owner decides to close shop, the store is gone. If the government wants to use eminent domain to bulldoze the shop, it's gone. Stores (collectively) aren't centralized. But each individual location is centralized.
What this decentralized web sounds like is akin to file sharing. As with Peer-to-Peer (P2P) music file sharing. Instead of EVERYTHING being in one place, the "stuff" is spread out over multiple places, with individuals and their home computers acting a servers. If my computer is off, there's still a chance dozens or hundreds of other people are hosting. Essentially, instead of ONE server, the "stuff" that makes a website is fractionalized and the computers of individual users all host a piece.
Problem is, if not enough people are active, the website will lag. Like with a co-op, if too many people call out sick or can't be bothered, the few who show up to work can't run the place all by their lonesome.