Considering the amount of tech and self hosting types that live in cities, it seems like it would be popular to have little mesh intranets all over the place, but I’m not aware of any.
I read about NYC Mesh a while back, and I wonder if there are other similar things already in widespread use that I just haven’t heard about.


Why do I get the feeling that I’m arguing a pointless argument with an LLM? I’m going to put the good-faith effort in for this comment but I’m not going any further.
Yes, that kind of approach can help ensure that open source projects are sustainably maintained.
It’s open source. You always run the risk that you might have to do a hard-fork of any open source software regardless of who maintains it.
Yeah, but that’s true of virtually all methods of communication. That’s a regulatory problem, not a meshtastic or reticulum problem. There is nothing specific about meshtastic/reticulum that makes it resistant to Government censorship. The best you could possibly do with reticulum is stick some messages on a USB drive and pass them to someone else - but then why not just FAT32 format the drive and send your friend some files? See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sneakernet
I feel like you’re arguing in bad faith here. I’ve been trying to help you understand some of the benefits/drawbacks of Reticulum and Meshtastic, not argue that one is inherently better than the other.
LoRa licenses the technology out. You’re not buying the device directly from them. It’s a standard, basically an identifiable brand.
The reason that meshtastic and reticulum are designed primarily to be work over LoRa is because Governments and businesses have done the hard work of setting standards and legislating free and open portions of the spectrum which end-users don’t have to pay to use. This opened up the realistic possibility of private medium-to-long range mesh networks existing in the first place.
Also, do you know that Meshtastic uses a queue messaging format which can be routed over UDP/TCP just like reticulum?
The main first use-case for LoRa was IoT devices where low power is a requirement. Think things like monitoring when gates are open/closed, what the soil temperature is, how much Nitrogen is in soil, etc. I think there are likely waaaay more low power nodes out there than nodes in people’s homes.
It’s great that you’re doing some research and have some ideas that you want to try out, but I think you could probably do with doing a bit more research to shore up your reasoning.