• pup_atlas@pawb.social
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    2 months ago

    I don’t see this as enshittification. It’s a real thing that’s happening, but raw storage is expensive. They pay for it directly. Unlike artificially limiting features that are “free” to them, this genuinely isn’t, it’s not even really super discounted for them on the backend. They’re likely just paying for a series of S3 buckets.

    • Count042@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      I’m a sys admin/devops engineer, and yes, storage is far more expensive then people realize.

      This is the very definition of enshittification.

      EDIT: To those downvoting:

      Do you actually know what the definition of enshittification is? Apparently not.

      Enshittification (alternately, crapification and platform decay) is a pattern in which online products and services decline in quality. Initially, vendors create high-quality offerings to attract users, then they degrade those offerings to better serve business customers, and finally degrade their services to users and business customers to maximize profits for shareholders.

      It doesn’t matter that the cost of storage is a real thing. They gave things of value away for free to grow their user base and to try and capture network effects. Now that they think they have that they are taking away ( or decreasing ) the free stuff of value they gave away.

      The fact that storage has value is literally an important part of enshitification.

      It wouldn’t be enshitification if they gave away free stuff that wasn’t valuable.

      • tyler@programming.dev
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        2 months ago

        It’s not enshittification because it literally doesn’t follow the second part of your own definition. Needing to change your offerings because your internal prices increase is normal business. Enshittification literally is from companies offering stuff to entice users and then they realize they have nothing else to offer to businesses, so they remove features in order to sell them to businesses or to increase ads.