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by kbenson
4022 days ago
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So, I think I'm starting to understand your argument, which is that the web is composed of many services which each is implemented relying on an underlying centralized authority, and you want that to change? If that's the case, then I understand the need, and agree with that poiint of view. But I think to say "the web" or "the internet" is centralized is very big stretch. I wouldn't call a bunch of decentralized services with little shared infrastructure and ownership "centralized". |
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Forget the web as a whole and consider a single service such as HN. That graph has |clients| >> |servers|. More than the cardinality the client and server nodes are different in kind.
I consider a decentralised architecture to be one where the nodes can in principle participate equally.
You are arguing that the web is decentralised because there are many services to choose from. I don't disagree, but that's above the application layer protocol- which is what I thought we were discussing. In that case decentralisation happens above the application layer. So in humans? By that definition BBS's were decentralised because I could call a different one.
In other words, yes the web is decentralised because I can choose from many Forex APIs. But at the logical application layer of HTTP, OANDA is a centralised service. HTTP addresses point to specific nodes which may or may not be individual servers at the network layer, but from the point of view of HTTP that's what you address. In a decentralised application layer protocol I would expect to that not to be the case.
That Google is proposing this service is proof that individual web services are centralised. There's a single point of failure.
We're talking at different layers. It's just semantics from here on in.