I was speaking to preserving meats. I know how to ferment things. I have fridges of lacto veg.
I'll stick to drying for my meat preservation.
Ensure you dry only lean thin strips of whole meat very quickly for safety's sake, and store it airtight where humidity cannot later increase its Aw. I would also avoid doing this with certain meats that could be infected by trichinella like pork and wild game meats because drying alone will not make it safe to consume.
Simple drying of raw meat products such as in the production of salami, spanish chorizo, traditional pepperoni, etc. as the sole method of preservation is illegal here, and likely in your country too. By the time Aw (water activity) reached safe levels, harmful bacteria may have already reached populations that could easily cause death. This is why these deli products are initially fermented and then subjected to a slow drying process that can last weeks or months. I have a few commercial meat fermenting cultures in my freezer right now. These include LAB cultures containing species such as L. curvatus, L. sakei, L. farciminis, S. carnosus, and P. acidilactici. Various strains also impart the characteristic flavour profile that the specific product-type should have.
Canada, USA, and most other countries have strict standards for how long the meat fermentation period must last at specific temperatures to reach a pH of under 5.3. In other words, if your fermentation temperature was 35 degrees C and it took more than 28 hours to achieve a pH drop below 5.3, the entire production batch cannot be legally sold and must be thrown out.
Meat (including fish) has been fermented since ancient times for preservation all around the world, but they relied on the natural LAB populations within their working environment to achieve fermentation. Obviously not the safest way, but many Italians in particular still make their fermented homemade meat products this old way where it's still an important part of their culture. The indigenous populations of Alaska and northern Canada still rely on fermentation to preserve meat using naturally occurring bacteria in many communities. Fermented seal flipper - yum! Lol