←back to thread

1502 points JustSkyfall | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.278s | source
Show context
wpm ◴[] No.45284156[source]
I can sympathize, but this was always the end deal for cloud SaaS apps. Give em a taste, get em hooked, get years of institutional knowledge and process embedded in the app, refuse to let them export it, and crank the price up.

It's not only guys named Larry who are lawnmowers. Don't stick your hand in. *Own* your shit. Be suspicious of anyone who tries to convince you not to. If it's "easy" it might come back to bite you.

Even if some self-hostable software stack does a rug pull and changes the license, you just don't have to update. You can go log into the database and export to whatever format you want.

replies(8): >>45284319 #>>45284486 #>>45284621 #>>45284645 #>>45284726 #>>45284734 #>>45284830 #>>45285638 #
SilverElfin ◴[] No.45284830[source]
I think it’s more than export. Once you export your data you have to be able to import it into some other alternative and have it be useful. For example, even if you have the ability to export everything into some archive, it would be tedious to go find old conversations in slack from some offline archive versus searching for it in whatever you have moved to. I think all these online applications rely on lock in and end up extorting you at some point. We need better regulations for data portability.

The reality no one wants to admit - most software companies have no moat whatsoever if they aren’t allowed to be anti competitive.

replies(1): >>45284889 #
1. scooter_y ◴[] No.45284889[source]
good thing that Hack Club has a LOT of smart and talented people + using FOSS software makes it easy to fix stuff!