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Comment by grenoire

9 years ago

Unfortunate. Goes to show that you really can't break even without ads or selling/analysing data with a centralised social network.

or put another way, "people don't want to pay for most things"

  • Or to put it another way, people care more about money than their own privacy.

    • Yep. I have a limited amount of money that I need to spend on more essential purchases. I'll happily trade my data/privacy for the right frivolity.

      When someone starts letting me pay for groceries with my browser history sign me up.

      2 replies →

    • For the right price I'm okay. I paid Netflix for an account but they use my data to train their algorithm and enhance their product. I don't know all the details behind their work. Am I not trading their privacy? Do I really know if they aren't selling my data my preference with another partner? Do I want to pay $$ for social network? I have to weigh what justifies cost for me; most of my friends won't pay for an account for Facebook, and because I enjoy having an online social network with my real life friends, I am okay for as long as Facebook doesn't sell my name to advertiser (they can track my browser history for sure and I know they do). I accept the risk and I keep a close eyes on my online activity so nothing backfires on me.

    • Don't think it's really about privacy in this case. I mean how can anyone seriously be a Twitter user and caring about their privacy.

      Would be like standing in the town square screaming your thoughts into a loud speaker then being upset that everyone knows what your thinking.

  • Personally, I always wanted to see a site that has ads and is free to read, but charges a small fee to create an account - just to see if it would help reduce trolling and sock puppets.

you really can't break even without ads or selling/analysing data with a centralised social network

I don't think we actually know that as a fact, it's just that not much else has been tried.

  • I find cloud feadreader aren't that different at least from the view point of a passive reader. They seem to be profitable, by restricting free features. Like: only x feeds free to aggregate and a ~15 minute delay of all feeds. Search is also a pro feature. I also have the feeling twitter is extremely over engineered.