← Back to context Comment by anomaly_ 2 years ago So, go to a different provider? 4 comments anomaly_ Reply baq 2 years ago More like don't start a business at all because of provider risk. immibis 2 years ago Or use a provider with a predictable cost structure. There are PLENTY. You didn't need to choose this exact one. carlmr 2 years ago The problem is that it isn't entirely clear which ones have predictable cost to the non-lawyers eye. I.e. they should have to have sane defaults, like reasonable spending limits and opt-out, by regulation, since the market is failing here. 1 reply →
baq 2 years ago More like don't start a business at all because of provider risk. immibis 2 years ago Or use a provider with a predictable cost structure. There are PLENTY. You didn't need to choose this exact one. carlmr 2 years ago The problem is that it isn't entirely clear which ones have predictable cost to the non-lawyers eye. I.e. they should have to have sane defaults, like reasonable spending limits and opt-out, by regulation, since the market is failing here. 1 reply →
immibis 2 years ago Or use a provider with a predictable cost structure. There are PLENTY. You didn't need to choose this exact one. carlmr 2 years ago The problem is that it isn't entirely clear which ones have predictable cost to the non-lawyers eye. I.e. they should have to have sane defaults, like reasonable spending limits and opt-out, by regulation, since the market is failing here. 1 reply →
carlmr 2 years ago The problem is that it isn't entirely clear which ones have predictable cost to the non-lawyers eye. I.e. they should have to have sane defaults, like reasonable spending limits and opt-out, by regulation, since the market is failing here. 1 reply →
More like don't start a business at all because of provider risk.
Or use a provider with a predictable cost structure. There are PLENTY. You didn't need to choose this exact one.
The problem is that it isn't entirely clear which ones have predictable cost to the non-lawyers eye. I.e. they should have to have sane defaults, like reasonable spending limits and opt-out, by regulation, since the market is failing here.
1 reply →