Comment by twixfel

1 year ago

People don't check for every possible thing that can go wrong, otherwise we wouldn't have time to do anything. I remember when I got charged a "cancelling fee" for cancelling my Adobe subscription that accidentally went past its free trial. The situation was so ludicrous that I had never imagined that they would charge something like 6 months worth of subs me to cancel a monthly subscription. In the end I got out of it and paid nothing but I have absolutely hated Adobe ever since.

These things are scams because they prey on the fact that they're the only one shitty enough to do something so shitty and are counting on you not realising just how shitty they are.

Sorry, maybe this is a generational thing? I always look for a catch when something is "free". Your example as old as time, offer a free trial period but if you don't cancel X days before it ends, you automatically subscribe for another week/month/year. This has extended to getting a big discount for your first year after signup and then you pretty much have to cancel and go to a competitor, or wait until a couple days before the contract ends and some sales rep will call you and offer you another discount. It's scummy, it sucks, but it's been s reality for decades and is only getting worse.

With hosting - be it cloud or virtual or real hardware - the problem has always been that bandwidth use is completely outside your control. It was the first thing to check in the early 2000s and still is today, to an even greater extend.

So yes, sorry, as the other reply says, I might come across uncharitable or even condescending, but as tech people developing tech stuff how can one not be at least a little careful when there's a big "free candy" sign slapped onto something?

  • I definitely think this is a generational thing. Like you, I come from the land of "everything costs something" and treat free with suspicion, but also, we have been conditioning people to expect things to be free, and to bury and distract people from the real cost of those things for quite some time.

    Two of the largest video content distribution platforms on the Internet, YouTube and Twitch. Free!* (just watch these ads). Store your data on the cloud with Dropbox, Google Drive, or OneDrive! Free!* (just let us harvest data about what you put in there) Hell, 25 years ago, you want to get on the internet? Use NetZero! Free!* (just look at these popups) And this pattern continues to be pervasive. And the real killer here is that we keep getting things for free*, so people that weren't around during the introduction of these tactics have grown accustom to it as if it's how things should be.

    So, I agree, we really have a problem here in messaging and in using misleading psychology to bury dark patterns like the true cost of Free in services we use. We probably should be teaching more folks to beware of the true cost of things, that if it's free, you're the product, not the user, so on and so forth.

  • You do not understand. Of course I know that if I fail to cancel, then I must keep paying. I had a month's subscription. At worst I expected to pay for one extra month of subscription before I remembered to cancel. I was OK with that perceived risk and understood it.

    What I did not expect: to cancel one month of subscription you must pay 6 months of subscription as a cancellation fee. Maybe you expect that, but I have seen that anywhere else and did not expect it.

    >So yes, sorry, as the other reply says, I might come across uncharitable or even condescending, but as tech people developing tech stuff how can one not be at least a little careful when there's a big "free candy" sign slapped onto something?

    It wasn't free candy in my case, I was paying.