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Rezha Julio
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What happened to self-hosted blogs?

2 min read

I remember a while ago when all of us run a personal blog on the Internet. And I mean personal, not hosted on some side platform or an addition to their website. I mean personal.

Companies and individuals are now using Medium platforms to host and support all their articles, essays and case studies. I understand the drawing and can even list the positive elements:

  1. Under the Medium brand there is already a large community.
  2. Promoting your own work and following others is easy.
  3. The platform can be set up and implemented relatively easily.

Unfortunately, this has had a very severe impact on the blogging community - nobody controls their own blogs. It was an interesting and fun experience for me when I found a new blog:

These personalized self-hosted blogs have inspired other developers to build their own or tweak current blogs. In some ways this was a small factor when we pushed what we can do further and further on the web as developers went on to compete with each other.

I also think this inspired people to write better content instead of choosing clickbait garbage to get “featured” or boosted promotion on the main blogging platform, but I don’t think that’s the worst thing to come from this mass migration to a single blogging platform.

I’m not sure if it is the intention of Medium, but I personally believe that it is awful either way. The personality of most design and development blogs has been completely removed from them. All blogs look the same now.

Perhaps I was just a salty developer, with a narrow, pessimistic perspective about where our bloggers seem to lead – or perhaps I have only higher standards.


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