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Why “Plebstor?”

In the ancient Roman Republic, the Plebians were members of the general citizenry in ancient Rome as opposed to the privileged patrician class.

Throughout the period known as The Conflict of Orders, between 500 BC and 287 BC, plebians had organized and progressively pushed for reforms that gave them some of the same rights as the patricians.

Eventually, hundreds of years later, Rome went into full blown empire and crashed.

Well, 2,000 years later, and 230 years after the founding of “The Land of the Free,” we still have a political class that considers the rest of us their underlings.

And, in the last 20 years, a whole new class has arisen to power. The “surveillance capitalists” are all of the people and companies that use our information, or information about us as part of their business model. They share, sell, leak, or otherwise mishandle our information, leading to an escalating loss of privacy all across the developed world.

We called our association Plebstor because we aim to disrupt the status quo in much the same way as the Plebs did in Ancient Rome, but instead of using political action, we are using computers and our freedom to associate and communicate in order to opt out of abusive corporations and other institutions and to reclaim our privacy.

By providing a way that individuals can participate in a peer-to-peer computing resources network, we provide ways to consume computing services which do not require payment in legal tender. When you use Plebstor, you pay for the services you use by providing a node that provides services to others on the network in exchange for the services you use.

By coming together as individuals, and not as a corporation, we effectively create a full scale, private, independent barter network for computing services, and we provide a way of opting out of contracts with corporations that use and abuse our data as part of their business models.

When millions of us do this, we send a message to Big Data that we don’t consent. And we stop sending them our money.

And, about the money: For now, let’s just say that we’re living in a monopoly money society where banks and governments create money to put people into debt. Being in debt is a form of slavery. As modern day abolitionists, we at Plebstor do not consent to this either.

If you want to continue paying for these services with your favorite national or government currency, go ahead. But you will have to do that somewhere else.

We’ll still be here, though, in case you see the value in Plebstor.

Plebstor is your data stored, for free, and forever.

If you want it.

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What is Plebstor?

Plebstor is a community of volunteers. Plebstor is data. Plebstor is You.  Plebstor is your data stored, for free, and forever.

If you want it.

War is Over If You Want It
War is Over If You Want It

Plebstor is a data storage network made up of peer-to-peer nodes. It uses open-source, freely available storage and clustering software such as Ceph, IPFS, Scality S3, MongoDB, MySQL, RabbitMQ, DRBD, KVM, WordPress, rsync, SSH or anything else that the peer to peer members of the community need in order to get their respective jobs done.

Be it backup storage for family photos and videos, shared folders for collaboration, a VPS server for a project, a WordPress website, or pretty much anything you need to host. The idea is that we want to provide secure, non-commercial peer-to-peer ways to do these things instead of having everything centered on corporations or dollars as payment.

Plebstor is hosted all over the world. Some people run Raspberry Pi’s or other servers at home. Others, servers run in datacenters or in the cloud.  Some are hosted by people who know how node networks work, and others are hosted by people who think what we’re doing is cool and are willing to let us place a node under their care.  All you have to do is feed it… by plugging in the cord.

We encrypt all of our storage at rest. When you use our services properly, none of your data is ever available to anyone to abuse. Not even our sysadmins can see the data stored on the system.  Most data is actually encrypted before it even enters our system, in addition to being encrypted at rest.

Plebstor is non-commercial. It is not a company. It does not accept dollars as payment. It doesn’t even have a single mailing address to send a payment to. It’s made up of everyone who uses it. It is everywhere.

You or your organization can gain access to Plebstor by running a node. By running a node, you can participate in, and store and retrieve data from the Plebstor cloud.

You can choose to configure and admin your own node, or you can allow Plebstor sysadmins to do this for you.

At various times, we will have various testnets running, which develop our concepts and lead to systems that can be used in highly available production scenarios.

Right now, Plebstor is just getting started.  We don’t have a terms of service or privacy policy.  We are not a company, and we may choose not to work with you if you are one.

If you want to help us build our private testnet, we are first looking to spin up a Ceph cluster (https://ceph.io) and are actively recruiting member nodes for this purpose.

As we grow in node count, we will be able to offer even more services to the community.  But, until you put your node online, you can’t use Plebstor.