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📺 PeerTube Co-op FAQ: Building a Member-Owned Alternative to YouTube

The future of video doesn’t belong to platforms. It belongs to people.

We’re building a PeerTube co-op: a member-owned, democratically governed video platform based in BC. No algorithms deciding what matters. No corporate choke points. No waiting for permission.

This is about taking control of the infrastructure, the governance, and the culture—and doing it together.

Why a co-op?

Because co-ops give people ownership, governance rights, and collective resilience. Instead of handing data and control to a platform, members pool resources, share decision-making, and shape policies together.

BC has a strong legal framework for co-operatives, which makes it a natural place to explore this seriously.

Why PeerTube?

PeerTube is federated, open-source, and already battle-tested as a decentralized alternative to YouTube. It’s not perfect—but it provides a solid foundation for a co-op structure to build on top of.

The idea is to pair federated tech with co-operative governance, so neither corporate control nor a single admin dictates the rules.

Who’s behind this?

Right now, this is being organized by me (@atomicpoet) and @Crissy, along with a growing group of interested folks: creators, privacy advocates, security experts, and co-op thinkers from around the world.

We’re still early—think founding conversations, not bylaws and board elections. But the energy is real.

How much does it cost to join?

What follows is the proposed model, not something set in stone. The final structure will be decided by the member-owners once the co-op is formed.

The idea is to keep membership affordable for individuals while ensuring the co-op is financially sustainable from the start—with no ads, no data harvesting, and no outside investors. Just members pooling resources to run the platform together.

Base membership: C$5.95/month
Medium tier (10–100 GB/month): +C$3 → C$8.95/month
Heavy tier (100 GB+): +C$10 → C$15.95/month

At scale, with a typical user mix (80 % base / 15 % medium / 5 % heavy), this works out to about C$6.90 per member per month, which comfortably covers hosting and operational costs.

There’s also a one-time buy-in of C$50, which funds initial setup (domain, CDN deposits, buffer) and helps keep the early months profitable without raising dues. When spread over the first year, that’s roughly C$4.17/month in effective cost coverage.

What happens if the co-op grows faster than expected?

The financial and technical model is step-wise, not linear. As membership increases, transcoding nodes, storage/CDN tiers, and egress commitments scale at defined traffic thresholds.

The co-op’s development will unfold in three phases, with member-owners deciding collectively when to move from one to the next.

Do I need technical skills to participate?

No. Technical expertise is welcome but not required. Governance, policy, communications, creative, and community-building skills are just as valuable. Infrastructure will be professionally managed, with costs shared through dues.

Will the co-op run its own infrastructure or rely on third parties?

The proposal uses managed hosting as a baseline, scaling as membership grows. This provides reliability early on while retaining the ability to self-host more components later.

How will moderation work?

Moderation scales with user base and federation breadth:

Member reporting and rotating stewards handle first-line triage
Paid moderation begins once activity reaches 10–15+ hours/week
Budget estimates: up to C$270/month for ~100 users; part-time moderation (~C$1,755/month) for ~500 users

Will the instance federate with everyone or be selective?

The proposal starts with a curated allowlist of trusted instances to control load.

It will also:

Adopt shared blocklists as a baseline
Document defederation criteria and appeals to keep the process transparent

As membership grows, federation posture can be revisited by member-owners.

What’s the timeline for incorporation and launch?

We’re not working toward rigid dates—we’re building deliberately, in three clear phases:

Phase 1: Formation and groundwork. Incorporation, drafting bylaws, establishing MVP infrastructure, and setting out the core policies (ToS, AUP, takedown).
Phase 2: Growth and refinement. Expanding membership, activating the hybrid pricing model, introducing stipends, and refining federation posture.
Phase 3: Maturity and expansion. Adding part-time moderation, building reserves and insurance, and exploring potential expansion into other Fediverse services.

Each phase builds on the last, and decisions about when to transition between them will be made collectively by member-owners.

What drives costs the most?

Egress and bandwidth dominate, not storage. P2P offload reduces egress as viewer concurrency rises, but outbound data remains the biggest expense.

How does the pricing hold up financially?

At as few as five members, the co-op becomes cash-flow positive, and margins scale significantly with growth.

100 members → estimated monthly surplus C$587
1,000 members → estimated monthly surplus C$6,870

I’ve never been in a co-op before. Will there be guidance?

Yes. The initial bylaws and governance structure will include clear documentation. New members will be onboarded through AGMs, published policies, and transparent reporting, as required under BC Co-operative Association law.

Will you use open-source tools for internal communications?

That will ultimately be up to the member-owners to decide collectively.

For now, tools like Google Docs are being used temporarily to get everyone aligned quickly. Yes, the irony isn’t lost—it’s like holding a union meeting in Jeff Bezos’ living room. But this is just to get the ball rolling, not a long-term choice.

How will governance work?

We’re still defining this collectively, but the plan is to follow BC co-op regulations while ensuring member governance is meaningful, not symbolic. Expect conversations around:

Founding member structure
Board or steering committee setup
Decision-making processes
Transparency and accountability measures

I’m not a PeerTube user, but I’m interested in the co-op structure. Is that relevant?

Yes—very. Some participants are here primarily because they’re passionate about co-operatives, not necessarily PeerTube. That expertise will be crucial for getting the legal, organizational, and governance frameworks right.

Will non-members be able to watch videos?

Yes. As with most PeerTube instances, most viewing will be public, but uploading and policy decisions are reserved for member-owners. The co-op’s primary responsibility is to its members, while still providing an open and accessible platform for viewers.

What will the co-op be called?

The official name and branding will be chosen collectively by the founding member-owners after incorporation.

How do I get involved or stay informed?

The next step will be setting up an initial coordination space (on open-source infrastructure, if members choose that path) to keep everyone looped in and start shaping this together.

If you want to be kept informed, reach out privately or share your email so you can be included when that happens.

Isn’t this ambitious?

Yes. But the response so far has been incredible. The mix of skills and motivations showing up this early—technical, organizational, privacy, cultural—is exactly what’s needed to make something real.

📝 Closing Thought

This is still early days. But something’s forming—a group of people who see the cracks in the platform world and want to build something better, together.

If that resonates with you, you’re welcome here.

#PeerTubeCoop #PeerTube #Cooperative

RE: https://atomicpoet.org/objects/2289eb47-0f39-463d-a056-8568e12e70f3

The US is having a bankruptcy crisis for *everyone* right now.

Farm bankruptcy is up bc ALL bankruptcy is up. And way more people qualify for the super-special debtor-friendly farm kind now.

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Farms have a very special kind of bankruptcy that's super debtor-friendly, and is designed to KEEP THEM IN BUSINESS without having to sell off much or any land.

And it used to only be for family farms that make most of their $$ from farming. But Trump expanded it so way more straight-up wealthy people, who own farms, qualify. 🤠

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Got the Sunday video up early this time!

If you've been seeing news about "oh no there's a spike in farm bankruptcy"- it is NOT as simple as "farms go out of business & then investors buy them all."

hoooooo boy

youtu.be/xon9A5_4tQwn

We, Fre(i)e Softeare GmbH, are hiring Lomiri developers (C/C++ - Qt5+6 - QML - CMake). For details see sunweavers.net/blog/node/150

Watch my BSidesPDX keynote where I spoke honestly and frankly about the terrifying reality that Americans are facing under Trump's fascist regime, alongside practical advise for communities to defend themselves micahflee.com/practical-defens

Class graffiti as Wales expresses its distaste for the ultra right chancers-

‘We have to book bigger rooms’: Green membership surge causes novel problems - theguardian.com/politics/2025/ "Two days after he became leader, #Polanski said he had carried out 61 media interviews and the pace has barely slackened." absolutely key #greens

Can anyone recommend a VPS service run by a collective or other anti-capitalist group?

#Forgejo 13.0.2 and 11.0.7 were just released! They are security releases.

We recommend that all installations are upgraded to the latest version as soon as possible.

Check out the release notes and download it at forgejo.org/releases/. If you experience any issues with this release, please report to codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/i.

#forgejorelease

Anyone can become disabled.

Anyone can lose their job.

Anyone can become homeless.

Anyone can go hungry.

These are not moral failings. They can happen in an instant.

Most people are far closer to living in poverty than they realize.

We must fight for one another & for the most vulnerable.

Food aid has never been cut off during a shut down.

Secretary Rollins is refusing to use USDA emergency funds for SNAP.

She was also the one who said no amnesty for farm workers because all the “able bodied” Medicaid recipients can do their jobs.

They want people sick, hungry and scared because then it’s harder to fight back.

Stephen Miller was not elected. He was chosen by Trump.

Yet he’s been instrumental in the bombings of Venezuelan boats.

Instrumental in the murder of countless people.

Yesterday he was asked about putting troops on the ground in Venezuela and said:

“These are terrorists and they're gonna be killed."

He’s out of control.

SNAP recipients get an average of $6.31 a day for food. 

Members of Congress get $79 a day.

You know what else they get? Healthcare for life.

Meanwhile their constituents are facing huge insurance increases and being told they must “prove they matter” to receive healthcare. 

Maybe it’s time congress proved they matter! 

Fund SNAP and protect Medicaid! 

A December update of Microsoft Teams will now track and report your location using the local Wi-Fi network. This is a less intrusive way of tracking time spent in the office than asking people to badge in and out.

It’s off by default but IT admins can make its usage required.

tomsguide.com/computing/office

Half the ICE budget is for the puppy pads they need when they get chased back into their SUVs by righteous citizens.

Science needs to be ready for the censorship and chilling of scholarly research. That means a global rejection of large intermediaries getting between researchers and the public. #OAWeek eff.org/deeplinks/2025/10/scie

Today i took part of #linuxday2025 in Palermo,
I talked about the risks for Android ROMs related to AOSP and how #LinuxMobile and @postmarketOS might be a way forward, together with our communities.
Shout out to @thefreecircle for the great organization and the ambitious and very lively event!

#postmarketOS #mobilelinux

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