• @justastranger@sh.itjust.works
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    2051 year ago

    Alt: proprietary software devs trying to live off their work as their primary income source while still allowing people to use their product for free

    • @eating3645@lemmy.world
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      741 year ago

      Get out of here with a level-headed response. We came to rabble.

      Rabble rabble! Something something evil! Rabble!

    • Regular Human
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      581 year ago

      I swear, lemmy users have proven to be so entitled. Just don’t buy it.

    • Zloubida
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      321 year ago

      If it spies on me, if it shows me ads, then it’s not free.

      • scytale
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        191 year ago

        Yeah, I think a lot of the people who are against are the ones who don’t like the ad-removal model, because you are paying to remove ads on an app that uses a platform whose foundation is built against ads and tracking. The subscription model or one-time payment for life is fair IMO; people are free to support the dev (and please support the lemmy devs and instance admins too!). It’s the ads (and tracking that come with it) that’s kinda weird.

        • @THED4NIEL@lemmy.world
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          41 year ago

          Thinking one step further one could implement a revenue share from ads or subscriptions or third party apps, that supports the instance you are registered to on a voluntary basis (we don’t want to turn this into Reddit after all).

          This way the developer and the server instance owners could sustain their service, a hopefully symbiotic relationship.

          But I’m just throwing ideas in the room, doesn’t mean they’re good in the long run.

    • Captain Beyond
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      161 year ago

      As an end-user I believe I am entitled to the freedom to use, modify, and share the software I use. If your business model is incompatible with my values I won’t support you, simple as. I don’t have any problem monetarily supporting developers but not if they disagree with my principles.

      I’m pretty sure I’ve seen this exact argument made against ad-blockers, too.

      • KaynA
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        31 year ago

        You do have the freedom to modify the proprietary binary you’re being given. You just can’t distribute your modifications.

          • KaynA
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            11 year ago

            Irrelevant to the point I’m making. Whether something is open source or not does not impact your freedom to modify it, just the freedom to distribute your modifications.

    • snooggums
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      141 year ago

      Reality: what you pay goes more to monetization than the user experience