I built a self-hosted affiliate tracking platform — here's why I think self-hosting affiliate software actually matters
from zekariyas@lemmy.world to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 09:19
https://lemmy.world/post/47699624

Hey r/selfhosted 👋 I’m the founder of Refearnapp, an affiliate tracking platform that you can self-host on your own infrastructure. I wanted to share why I went the self-hosted route and why it might matter to you if you’re running any kind of referral or affiliate program.

Why self-hosting affiliate tracking specifically? Most affiliate/referral SaaS tools charge per-click, per-conversion, or a % of revenue. When you’re scaling, that gets expensive fast. With self-hosting, you pay once (or just for your server) and that’s it — no surprise invoices tied to your growth.

What you actually own Your data stays on your server. Conversion events, affiliate emails, payout history — none of it goes to a third-party analytics pipeline you don’t control. No vendor lock-in. If Refearnapp (or any SaaS alternative) shuts down tomorrow, you still have everything running and your data intact. Custom integrations are actually possible. Access the DB directly, hook into your own webhooks, plug into internal tools — things that are impossible or heavily restricted on closed SaaS platforms. GDPR / compliance is simpler. When your users ask “where is my data?”, the answer is literally your own server. Much easier to manage than coordinating with a third-party processor. The tradeoff (being honest) Self-hosting means you’re responsible for uptime, updates, and backups. It’s not for everyone. But if you’re already comfortable running a VPS and a Docker container or two, the setup is straightforward.

Who it’s for If you run an indie product, a SaaS, or an e-commerce store and want to run affiliate/referral programs without handing over your conversion data to yet another third party — this is built for you.

Happy to answer questions about the tech stack, setup, or the reasoning behind going self-hosted. What do you all look for when evaluating self-hosted tools like this?

🔗 Repo: github.com/ZAK123DSFDF/refearnapp

#selfhosted

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eksb@programming.dev on 03 Jun 09:49 next collapse

“self hosting is important because …”

Uses github.

talkingpumpkin@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 10:21 next collapse

What self-hosted software you use is not hosted on some third party forge?

eksb@programming.dev on 03 Jun 10:37 next collapse

Github is like the Microsoft of 3rd party forges.

cenzorrll@piefed.ca on 03 Jun 16:01 collapse

Suspiciously so (͡•_ ͡• )

slazer2au@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 11:09 collapse

Forgejo.

Ruusunmarja@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 03 Jun 11:23 collapse

Old habits die hard. Github’s for discoverability. I self-host gitea. For FOSS projects I’d choose Codeberg though.

rako@tarte.nuage-libre.fr on 03 Jun 11:53 collapse

Do people actually discover projects by randomly wandering on github though

I mean, it’s all links, a link to github or a link to codeberg won’t change much

i_stole_ur_taco@lemmy.ca on 03 Jun 14:43 collapse

5 em dashes.