So far I know of Github pages and Gitlab pages where you can host a blog for free.

I think medium you can also publish a blog on there, but never actually tried it.

  • sir_reginald@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    neither github, gitlab or medium are private. stay away from those.

    specially from medium. medium has been trying to centralize and paywall the previous decentralized and open blog ecosystem.

    I recommend bearblog.dev which is more akin to Medium, where you don’t need to create the website, you just write the content.

    neocities.org is more similar to github pages, they host a static site for free. Although you’d be better by using a cheap VPS.

    Avoid the likes of tumblr, netlify, vercel and a long etc. They all have important privacy issues or open access of information.

  • Nik282000@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    How much traffic do you expect? An old laptop and DDNS service would have you covered.

    • pragmakist@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Depending on what they mean by “private” throwing i2p on there instead of ddns might be just the ticket.

      • Strict3443@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Then you can register a “domain” on reg.i2p with something like yourname.i2p as well.

  • kevincox@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    What are you trying to do?

    • Static files? Then GitLab/GitHub pages will be fine. There are also many providers like Netlify that specialized in static sites.
    • “Live” application like self-hosted WordPress? Then you will need to find a server provider where you can configure and run it.
    • Managed hosting of open source software. If you don’t want to maintain the blog software yourself it is pretty easy to find people that host common blogging software like https://wordpress.com.
    • SaaS blogging. Then you just sign up like https://medium.com, https://blogger.com or https://tumblr.com
      • bh64@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        why’d this get downvotes

        Recommending Medium and Blogger in a privacy community is terrible advice. It’s disappointing that this is actually getting upvoted.

        Edit: The other two comments provide actual private recommendations. This comment would be fine outside a privacy community.

      • kraniax@lemmy.wtf
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        1 year ago

        have you looked at the community? this is c/privacy and they recommended blogger lol

      • 7heo@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Because in spite of the question (“private host” as opposed to “privacy friendly host”), people have commented in the context of privacy (probably because of the community we’re on); and in that context, the mere mention of github or gitlab is met with downvotes.

        IMHO using github or gitlab for that isn’t much of a concern privacy wise (at least not more than browsing a website from the companies behind those services), but it surely is when it comes to data integrity (which is a totally separate concern, but people often confuse it with privacy, like they also do with security). I would not trust either service with that.

  • random65837@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Has being in privacy circles not taught you that private and free don’t get along?

    Companies dont donate server space, bandwidth and all the other hosting costs just to be nice.