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553 points bookofjoe | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.278s | source
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hliyan ◴[] No.43661165[source]
The phenomenon at work here is: if product being produced by a profit-seeking enterprise can be rented instead of being sold, said enterprise will eventually find a way to do it, then over time, rather than a single bill, it will attempt to rent out individual aspects of the now product-turned-service, followed by cost cutting that degrades the default service level while introducing additional service levels for which the consumer will have to pay additional fees, and finally making switching away to competitors progressively difficult for the consumer. This is a natural outcome of profit-maximization.
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illegally ◴[] No.43663200[source]
Single bill for modern software doesn't make sense economically anymore.

Do you want updates? You want new versions? New features? Support?

Single bill it's like buying an IPhone once and then you expect to get a new one for free each year.

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1. _Algernon_ ◴[] No.43664785[source]
>Do you want updates? You want new versions? New features? Support?

No. This was a solved problem decades ago. Purchase includes minor version updates, then you keep it for life without updates. Upgrading to the next version is a choice.

Why did we collectively agree that customer choice does not matter?