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46 votes
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Federal Trade Commission announces final “Click-to-Cancel” rule making it easier for US consumers to end recurring subscriptions and memberships
64 votes -
Guest Passes for Nebula now available
44 votes -
OpenAI hits more than one million paid business users
8 votes -
Free t-shirts for Kagi’s first 20,000 subscribers are available
30 votes -
The US government wants to make it easier for you to click the 'unsubscribe' button
58 votes -
AltStore PAL drops its annual subscription thanks to a grant from Epic
8 votes -
Apple’s requirements (subscription model only) to hit creators and fans on Patreon
53 votes -
Pricing updates — Nebula
36 votes -
I would very much like something akin to TikTok that's subscriber based and without infinite scroll
I'm thinking something I could use for news, with a feed that I curate myself. I'd open the app in the morning and see that I have a feed with five newstoks in it. I swipe to the first one,...
I'm thinking something I could use for news, with a feed that I curate myself. I'd open the app in the morning and see that I have a feed with five newstoks in it. I swipe to the first one, general updates from my local news, swipe for the weather, swipe for sports, etc. They'd all be short-form, and take the same amount of time it would take me to skim a newspaper. Once I get through each "card," my feed is done and I can put the app down and go about my day.
I could curate this feed to contain only the sources I want, and ideally content would not be user-generated, and instead more akin to traditional television with regularly scheduled programs. Then I can check at breakfast and see all the early news programs, check at lunch and see mid-day content, and ditto for the evening.
I'm not going to ruminate about social media, content, and news, but this would be a very refreshing change of pace instead of constantly being protective of my time, since everything is designed to suck away as much of it as possible.
A guy can dream, right?
15 votes -
Will Microsoft want to introduce a subscription fee to their Windows OS in the future?
Just had a chat with friends about the possibility and how it would likely be introduced. Paraphrased into the following; 2.99$/Month OEM installs have a 2 year license Upgrades are free for the...
Just had a chat with friends about the possibility and how it would likely be introduced.
Paraphrased into the following;
2.99$/Month
OEM installs have a 2 year license
Upgrades are free for the first year (from 11 to the new)
Comes with Office 365 and AI functionality to soften the blowWhat are your thoughts on this?
30 votes -
[SOLVED] What does the unsubscribe button on Outlook or Apple mail do?
I'm not talking about the unsubscribe button that is at the bottom of an email that takes you to the sender's website to unsubscribe. I'm talking about the button that occasionally shows up in...
I'm not talking about the unsubscribe button that is at the bottom of an email that takes you to the sender's website to unsubscribe. I'm talking about the button that occasionally shows up in outlook or apple mail that is delivered by the application.
I have clicked unsubscribe using the built in unsubscribe button in outlook and apple mail, only to receive more junk mail from that origin later that day. These buttons don't seem to do anything. What are they doing behind the scenes that is supposed to be getting you off mailing lists?
13 votes -
Hewlett-Packard wants you to pay up to $36/month to rent a printer that it monitors
60 votes -
Nebula reopens lifetime subscriptions for $300 USD
19 votes -
Norway's privacy battle with Meta is just getting started – regulator says it's investigating the company's new ad-free subscription services
28 votes -
International YouTube Premium price increase underway in some countries
40 votes -
Spotify has added audiobooks to its subscription model – reaching millions of people, it may revolutionise the already booming audiobooks business
38 votes -
Meta (Facebook / Instagram) to move to a "Pay for your Rights" approach
33 votes -
Microsoft might want to be making Windows 12 a subscription OS, suggests leak
74 votes -
What online subscriptions do you pay for?
In the corners of Tildes that I read on, I’ve noticed that a lot of us on here subscribe to online services like - Netflix, Kagi, Spotify, Dropbox, Mailbox.org, Patreon, Twitch, Bandcamp, etc. I,...
In the corners of Tildes that I read on, I’ve noticed that a lot of us on here subscribe to online services like - Netflix, Kagi, Spotify, Dropbox, Mailbox.org, Patreon, Twitch, Bandcamp, etc.
I, myself, am kind of stingy about subscriptions but lately I’ve been considering subscribing to some online services.
So I’d like to know which online services (like those with monthly and annual fees) have you subscribed to (which tier if applicable) and which ones do you think is worth it and which ones are not?
To get the ball rolling, the only regularly recurring monthly payments I have right now are with Namecheap for the domain and IONOS for my server (the cheapest tier).
I’ve managed to avoid subscribing for entertainment like Disney+ or YouTube Premium or even music streaming platforms. Though I’m considering Deezer for the hifi option.
I’ve at some point subscribed to Patreon, Bandcamp and Twitch for artists I really liked.
And I’m currently looking into productivity apps that might be worth it to me.
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PS: It’s my first time posting and if this post would be better elsewhere, don’t hesitate to move it. Thank you!
86 votes -
How do you keep track of your subscriptions?
We recently had a big thread about all of the subscriptions we find valuable. This is a follow-up to that: how do you keep track of and manage your subscriptions (if you do at all)? I’d love to...
We recently had a big thread about all of the subscriptions we find valuable.
This is a follow-up to that: how do you keep track of and manage your subscriptions (if you do at all)?
I’d love to have a sort of one-stop subscription management tracker where I can toggle things on and off and it can email me when something is coming due soon, but I’ve yet to find something like that I love.
If anyone has any tips, tricks, or pointers, I’d love to hear them!
20 votes -
YouTube is axing its ad-free Premium Lite subscription plan
54 votes -
Unlimited Kagi searches for $10 per month
96 votes -
Tinder unveils staggering $500-per-month ‘VIP’ subscription tier
26 votes -
Elon Musk thinking of charging money for Twitter
48 votes -
TikTok’s plan to take on Spotify and Apple Music
13 votes -
Spotify is raising the price of its single-account premium plan for the first time since 2011 and hiking other services as well
65 votes -
Google raising price of YouTube Premium to $13.99 per month
115 votes -
Why are we often hesitant to spend money on digital services?
This is sort of a "does anyone else?" type question, but I think it can create some interesting discussion. We have become accustomed to having many things for free online. Search, social media,...
This is sort of a "does anyone else?" type question, but I think it can create some interesting discussion.
We have become accustomed to having many things for free online. Search, social media, news, videos, games etc. The price of course is ads and our personal data. But spending money on these kinds of services that exists for free sometimes feels like a hurdle to overcome. I recently gave the paid search engine Kagi a try, and I spent way too much time pondering whether it was worth the $5. Yet I can spend ten times as much on random physical purchases or a round drinks with only a few seconds of decision making.
Even though we have lived with digital products for decades now, having something tangible and physical between your fingers still feels better. With some exceptions, because most people are paying for streaming services but renting movies in the video store have always cost money, so we are used to that - unlike stuff like search and email which many of us have gotten used to being available for free.
Can this ever change outside very tech-minded people? Because services that rely on subscriptions rather than dataharvesting and ads do exist, but with the exceptions of maybe the big streaming services, few get wider appeal and the masses flock to the so-called free services instead. I find it almost depressing that we have all these brilliant and innovative tech companies around the world doing amazing things, but a good deal of it all ends up with the goal of showing more ads. It is hard to compete with free, but is it possible to challenge the current most successful business model of "paying" with ads and data?
36 votes -
Another update to Kagi plans - More searches and unlimited AI interactions for subscribers
13 votes -
Update to Kagi Search pricing
22 votes -
Meta launching paid subscription service for Facebook, Instagram
11 votes -
Mozilla bundles its VPN and email/phone Relay services for $7 per month
11 votes -
I have to pirate colours now?
8 votes -
Quora+ Program: A case study in ruining a perfectly functional community forum and online information resource
10 votes -
MoviePass is relaunching with eyeball tracking to earn credits
10 votes -
Vizio’s profit on ads, subscriptions, and data is double the money it makes selling TVs
22 votes -
Twitter expands its subscription service to news articles
6 votes -
Grazily - highly targeted jobs in your inbox
5 votes -
NotOnlyFans: An open source, self-hosted digital content subscription platform like `onlyfans.com` with cryptocurrency payment
10 votes -
Through the looking GLASS - Om Malik interview with the developers of GLASS, a subscription photo sharing app
3 votes -
New ad-free search subscription service: Neeva
6 votes -
MDN Plus announcement
10 votes -
Twitter may be working on Twitter Blue, a subscription service that would cost $2.99 per month
14 votes -
Scroll has been acquired by Twitter
4 votes -
Twitter has acquired Scroll, a subscription for news sites, and intends to integrate it into their own upcoming subscription service
11 votes -
Cricut backs off plan to add subscription fee to millions of devices
13 votes -
The Netflix password-sharing crackdown has begun
18 votes -
Reddit announces "power-ups", their plan to have individual subreddits unlock features through members paying for a monthly subscription
40 votes -
YouTube TV sharply increases monthly subscription to $64.99
8 votes