Hey folks, is this a new interpretation of Rule 3 in /c/selfhosted? We’ve had a lot of threads about storage, pools, filesystems, hardware related to self-hosting over the years and they’ve been plenty useful for me. I’ve also helped people with such issues when I had the expertise.
Today I asked a question related to filesystem setup for a server and that post got removed citing Rule 3. I looked at the modlog and it appears a few other posts have been removed too. Is this right?


I had a look at rule 3, it is really vauge, about making it clear that you are self hosting.
When I look at the modlog screenshot you posted, the rule seems to be applied way to broadly.
They either need to make a rule denying posts about storage server, or start enforcing it fairly.
If they had a rule like that, I could accept it, as selfhosting to me implies more of running a service on the internet rather than a “simple” or “standard” storage server.
I could see the mods being annoyed at seeing the same questions being asked time and time again, especially when the community was created with a different focus in mind.
But that needs to be communicated clearly and not just randomly enforced.
TL;DR: Looks like a combo of bad rules, bad communication and too eager mods.
That would be better but storage is a fundamental part of self-hosting, given that commonly used services need significant storage (e.g. Immich) and storage redundancy is vital to the reliability of self-hosting these services. And it’s not just storage either. The compute hardware also has a fairy tight connection to what’s being self-hosted. E.g. GPU, RAM, have significant bearing on the ability to self-host LLMs. The same is true for network infrastructure.
Because these topics are interlinked in the context of self-hosting, the knowledge exists in this community members’ brains. Trying to separate it means these same people have to figure out another place to gather to talk about that subsection of self-hosting. I’m not aware of such a community and ever since I’ve been on Lemmy (2023) /c/selfhosted has been the place for it.