
Diaspora*
Social network platforms
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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Completely free
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- Public sector and nonprofit organizations
- Information technology and software
- Real estate and property management
What is Diaspora*
Diaspora* is an open-source, decentralized social networking platform that lets people share posts and interact without relying on a single central service. It is typically used by individuals and communities that want more control over data hosting and federation across independently operated servers ("pods"). The software supports identity and social graph portability across pods, with privacy controls such as sharing to specific groups ("aspects"). Deployments vary by pod operator, so features and policies can differ across instances.
Decentralized, pod-based architecture
Diaspora* runs as a federated network of independently operated servers rather than a single centralized service. This structure can reduce single-vendor dependency and allows communities to choose an operator whose policies they accept. It also enables self-hosting for organizations or technically capable groups that want to control infrastructure and data retention.
Open-source and self-hostable
The codebase is open source, which allows inspection, modification, and community-driven development. Organizations can deploy their own pod to meet internal governance requirements or integrate with existing infrastructure. This can be advantageous where procurement requires transparent software licensing and the ability to run the service without a commercial contract.
Granular sharing via aspects
Diaspora* includes an audience segmentation model ("aspects") to organize contacts and control who sees specific posts. This supports use cases where users want to separate personal, professional, or community audiences without maintaining multiple accounts. The model provides a privacy-oriented alternative to purely public posting workflows common in large social platforms.
Smaller network effects
Compared with large mainstream social networks, Diaspora* generally has a smaller user base and fewer high-visibility public communities. This can limit reach for organizations that depend on broad audience discovery, advertising ecosystems, or influencer distribution. Adoption often depends on users being willing to join specific pods and learn federation concepts.
Operational burden for self-hosting
Running a pod requires ongoing administration, including updates, security hardening, backups, and moderation processes. Smaller teams may find the total cost of ownership higher than using a fully managed, centralized service. Service quality and uptime can vary across pods because each operator sets their own operational standards.
Inconsistent features across pods
Because pods can run different versions and apply different policies, user experience and available functionality may not be uniform across the network. Federation can introduce edge cases in content delivery, account migration, and moderation coordination between pods. Organizations seeking standardized compliance controls and centralized reporting may find these differences difficult to manage.
Plan & Pricing
| Plan | Price | Key features & notes |
|---|---|---|
| diaspora* (software) | Free (no cost) | Open-source (AGPL), self-hosted or join community "pods"; no official subscription plans offered by the project. Pod operators may optionally accept donations; project accepts community donations/bounties for development. |
Seller details
Diaspora Foundation
New York, New York, United States
2010
Open Source
https://diasporafoundation.org/
https://x.com/diasporafdn