You're talking like we're still back in 2010 or something.
(1) Digital Ocean, Vultr, and Linode Boxes have a 300 Mbps port size, under polite use. That goes for every instance type. Search engines like Manticore or anything besides memory eating java things like elastic search can run under constrained environments in a cluster and when used with SSDs are really damn fast. Then there is Cloudflare who's services, as long as you don't abuse them, can help with massive distribution. Not to mention all of the storage backends that exist with really, really cheap storage. Backblaze, Wasabi, hell when some ingenuity you could probably use Dropbox apis for long term unlimited storage. This is your backbone.
(2) For extra redundancy and better distribution you can add in p2p which if used correctly can propagate new data to users within reasonable time frames and allow for data storage to be more resilient. Easily less than a minute in streaming environments.
Also, while IPFS is nice it doesn't have the resiliency necessary for the future. Mozilla won't do this but neither will any other browser making company.
(1) Digital Ocean, Vultr, and Linode Boxes have a 300 Mbps port size, under polite use. That goes for every instance type. Search engines like Manticore or anything besides memory eating java things like elastic search can run under constrained environments in a cluster and when used with SSDs are really damn fast. Then there is Cloudflare who's services, as long as you don't abuse them, can help with massive distribution. Not to mention all of the storage backends that exist with really, really cheap storage. Backblaze, Wasabi, hell when some ingenuity you could probably use Dropbox apis for long term unlimited storage. This is your backbone.
(2) For extra redundancy and better distribution you can add in p2p which if used correctly can propagate new data to users within reasonable time frames and allow for data storage to be more resilient. Easily less than a minute in streaming environments.
Also, while IPFS is nice it doesn't have the resiliency necessary for the future. Mozilla won't do this but neither will any other browser making company.