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Comment by shit_game

1 year ago

This is what sticks out to me about the situation. I would much rather a site go offline due to service overage triggering at some limit that I set - simply relying on the good faith of a host to subjectively waive fees is not reliable nor does it instill confidence that I won't be financially ruined by malicious third parties (like nearly happened here). I would imagine that the good faith of Netlify in this case would mean very little to a court when there is a contract that stipulates costs for services, and the worst case scenario for a user is that Netlify could take the issue to court with the contract the user agreed to and demand full payment. Even the possibility for this situation to occur without any tools existing to prevent it is terrifying and is a terrible value proposition for a service.