- Don't depend on other people's software services.
- Buy a domain and host your own website.
- Don't pick a sketchy TLD or registrar.
- Mailing lists beat social media accounts.
- It's okay to depend on a cloud.
I had the belief that the article was going to say the exact opposite wrt. cloud hosting. You're literally renting space, and if your stuff gets any heat, your cloud provider may simply shut you down without a trial.Even if you host your own server on your own legal property, most people don't have AS-numbers and peering agreements, so ultimately on the internet most people rent something.
I had the exact chain of thought, only to find that traffic of the site I built is at the mercy of how Google decided to rank webpages, and putting AI > youtube > Reddit in front of everything else.
> - Mailing lists beat social media accounts.
Similarly, Google set the metric for what counts as spams. Your emails can all go to the spam folder if their AI decides it should.
On (2), they can, but if you use a more established provider like Buttondown or Mailchimp, and you are not actually sending spam, a lot of folks have quite a bit of success building an audience that way. I've used Buttondown (not affiliated with them in any capacity) personally before and haven't had subscribers complain about deliverability. I am planning on rebooting that this year to see how it goes. I've heard most deliverability issues arise when folks trying to roll out their own email server.