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by reitanqild
2939 days ago
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> but ultimately not many people cared (despite the free tier) and the few paying users weren’t enough to make it My guess? Twitter only exist because of network effects. Everything else somebody else does better. Oh, and most orinary people are more interested in one-to-one group chat than in many-to-many. WhatsApp managed to break through even though they were announcing loud and clear that they were going to cost money. Why? I guess because they promised to provide something valuable: a versatile, reliable, trustworthy messaging solution for friends, families and small groups. Telegram has managed to break through as well. AFAIK Signal is climbing steadily and Matrix is getting more and more mindshare. Based my experience a lot people here will probably disagree with what I say about twitter. If you are one of those, feel free to tell me what technical detail twitter does better than everyone else. |
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> even though they were announcing loud and clear that they were going to cost money
On the other hand, WhatsApp announced this back when scammers aka mobile networks still charged a ton for texts, and WhatsApp was the only cheaper option.
Now the masses are trained to expect everything for free, so it's really hard to get them to pay for something. It's not even about social networks, even getting someone to buy a stand-alone app is hard enough - outside of the tech circle, most people consider it weird that I pay for apps. Even getting them to pay for the likes of Spotify is hard (most non-tech people I know are still on the free tier and get their music fix on Youtube, with ads and everything).
This is why I don't think a paid service is unlikely to succeed and become mainstream. A social network needs to be free, at least until it reaches a critical mass, at which point it can switch to a "freemium" model with a free (possibly ad-supported) base tier and a premium, ad-free tier.