• neclimdul@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    I mean it seems to happen pretty often. The Curiosity Nebula mess, Crunchyroll had a $10 for the lifetime of your account thing but when Sony bought them they started messing with it. Even Google tried it with Google App domains free tier which they promised for life. I think everyone said fu to the buyout and just waited for the class action until Google blinked at the last minute.

    I assume Plex will find a way to start charging lifetime purchasers any day now.

    At this point I look for them just to see what sort of train wreck it’ll turn into.

    • __dev@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Lifetime services/updates are always a scam. The economics of this are really simple: Nebula is $30 per year or $300 lifetime. That lifetime membership covers only 10 years of subscription. So what’s the plan after that? There’s only really three outcomes:

      • They stop providing you service
      • They go bankrupt trying to provide you service
      • They grow and stay big enough to be able to subsidize your service for your lifetime. I can’t overstate how unlikely this is.

      Buying a lifetime membership you’re gambling that Nebula will grow big enough that other people’s subscription will pay for your service. Your membership is a liability for them.

      It’s also bad from the other end. Lots of small software devs will sell lifetime updates but eventually need to abandon their products because they simply run out of money.

      A service continually costs money to provide. You can’t pay for that with a single payment. Lifetime services are simply incompatible with running a business long term. It’s a bad idea and someone is always getting screwed.