Comment by LiamPowell

1 year ago

The primary purpose of these services is to be able to scale up and continue working under heavy load, shutting the site down when this occurs would defeat the entire purpose of the service. I would say that they are transparent about both of the things you have listed by virtue of being one of those scaling serverless hosting services.

How about letting the user decide whether they want to scale beyond a certain point or incur huge charges?

Not too mention: if the primary purpose of these services is to allow a DDoS and then charge the user for it — then, yup, you're guessing it right: it's a scam.

When their business model makes DDoS attacks profitable for them... They're not in the hosting business, they're in DDoS/extortion business.

there is a middle ground between “I missed the spotlight because the service went down” and “this bill has ruined my life”.

they could ask the user for their budget when they are setting up their account as a basic guardrail, or they could give you a call