Every subscription you pay is dinner from a restaurant that spies on you, charges more every year, and owns the kitchen. What if your community owned the kitchen? AI, music, files, messaging, photos — cooked from scratch, on hardware you hold, governed by the people eating at the table.
Takeout is convenient. We're not going to pretend otherwise. But takeout comes with costs that don't show up on the receipt — your listening history profiled and sold, your prompts used to train models you'll pay for again later, your files scanned for ad signals, your conversations stored on servers in jurisdictions you've never considered.
The restaurant raises prices when it wants. It decides what's on the menu. It can close at any time and take your order history with it. And it's been doing this so long that most people don't even imagine the alternative.
The alternative is a kitchen. Your kitchen. Or better yet — a kitchen shared with neighbors who each bring something different: hardware, recipes, ingredients, expertise. The feast that comes out is better than anything any one of you could have cooked alone.
That's the premise. The math is real, the technology is ready, and the community model is how it becomes sustainable.
Every corporate ingredient has a community alternative — usually better quality, definitely cheaper, and you know exactly what's in it.
| 🏰 What They Sell You Pre-packaged, overpriced, surveilled |
🏹 What You Can Make Community ingredient, open recipe |
Why It Matters | |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI SubscriptionsOpenAI · Anthropic · Google · Microsoft | → | Ollama + open modelsLlama · Phi-3.5 · Mistral — offline-capable | Your prompts train their models. You're the unpaid chef. |
| Cloud Files & DocsGoogle Drive · OneDrive · Dropbox · iCloud | → | NextCloud + CollaboraFiles · calendar · docs — self-hosted | Google scans your docs. Microsoft Recall screenshots everything you do. |
| Music StreamingSpotify · Apple Music · Amazon Music | → | NavidromeYour library · lossless · zero algorithm | Spotify pays artists $0.003/stream and builds a detailed behavioral profile from your listening. |
Tech companies became powerful by sharing infrastructure costs — they just kept the benefits. Your community can do the same thing. Keep the benefits.
Six people sharing one kitchen setup pay a fraction of the cost each. More people → lower cost per person → better infrastructure for everyone. That's cooperative economics. Tech companies have always used it. Now you can too.
Six Raspberry Pi 5s pooled together hold 48GB of RAM. That's enough to run an 8B AI model that no single Pi could handle alone. The community's AI is smarter than any individual's AI. Same principle as any good kitchen brigade.
When your solo server goes down, everything stops. When one node in a mesh goes offline, the others route around it. A shared kitchen doesn't close because one stove breaks. Distributed infrastructure is more durable than isolated.
"Tech needs to connect us. Not entrap us.
That's been the modern mistake."
A kitchen runs on different skills. Some people grow the ingredients, some cook, some serve, some wash up. All of it matters. Here's where you fit.
Tell people this exists. Come to community calls. The table grows when guests become regulars.
Contribute to real costs: electricity, internet, hardware. Full access to everything the kitchen produces.
Your Pi is a community burner. Your hardware becomes community capacity. Electricity stipend included.
Your expertise is an ingredient too. Help others get set up, write guides, improve the recipes.
Keep the kitchen running. Shape decisions. Sponsor nodes for members who can't afford the hardware.