That's what I meant by "proximity to the end user", in the other note.

The end user should think about how he stores his events, just like he thinks about how he stores his word documents, e-mails, or whatnot. He can pay someone to archive them, he can download them, he can have a relay on his PC or a privately hosted relay, etc. Or he can just be like, I don't care about my GM note from Oktober 2022.

Most of the data stored on these gigantic servers is obsolete. People don't care if they delete it, but they feel obliged to save everything and they have your spam folder and the Powerpoint presentation you did 5 years ago copied to 5 different cloud megaservers and mirrored in 15 data centers worldwide and advertisers pay for that.

It's completely stupid and environmentally nuts.

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Discussion

Simple text notes are like daily chit-chat; no one remembers. Notes that get a bunch of interaction are probably worth saving, just like someone will remember an insightful comment made in a conversation.

The more effort that goes into a piece of content, the more likely it should be archived forever. Blog posts, git repos, books, videos, etc. that are intended to be more timeless should stick around.

Yes, if I want to find it, later, long-form is better, for instance.