+1
-1
public/open-social/index.md
+1
-1
public/open-social/index.md
···
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166
Alice's and Bob's repositories could be hosted on the same machine. Or they could be hosted by different companies or communities. Maybe Alice is self-hosting her repository, while Bob uses a free hosting service that came by default with his first open social app. They may even be running completely [different](https://github.com/bluesky-social/pds) [implementations](https://github.com/blacksky-algorithms/rsky/tree/main/rsky-pds). If both servers follow the AT protocol, they can participate in this web of JSON.
167
168
-
Note that `https://alice.com` and `at://alice.com` do not need to resolve to the same server. This is intentional so that having a nice handle like `@alice.com` doesn't *force* Alice to host her own data, to mess with her wesite, or even to *have* a site at all. If she owns `alice.com`, she can point `at://alice.com` at any server.
169
170
If Alice is unhappy with her hosting, she can pack up and leave:
171
···
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166
Alice's and Bob's repositories could be hosted on the same machine. Or they could be hosted by different companies or communities. Maybe Alice is self-hosting her repository, while Bob uses a free hosting service that came by default with his first open social app. They may even be running completely [different](https://github.com/bluesky-social/pds) [implementations](https://github.com/blacksky-algorithms/rsky/tree/main/rsky-pds). If both servers follow the AT protocol, they can participate in this web of JSON.
167
168
+
Note that `https://alice.com` and `at://alice.com` do not need to resolve to the same server. This is intentional so that having a nice handle like `@alice.com` doesn't *force* Alice to host her own data, to mess with her website, or even to *have* a site at all. If she owns `alice.com`, she can point `at://alice.com` at any server.
169
170
If Alice is unhappy with her hosting, she can pack up and leave:
171