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by great_psy 1146 days ago
Shouldn’t those prices be affected by moores law ?

I think I remember the tier prices being roughly the same since the service came out.

I get that salaries went up which adds to price, but over time it feels like storage price should go towards zero.

1 comments

This comes up all the time regarding Dropbox, why can't you pay less for a less-storage tier?

The answer is you're not really paying for the storage. You're paying for the servicing. The application with its network connectivity and data transfer, plus the overhead costs of billing and support when necessary.

The proposition may look like "$100 for 10 TB", but that's not a ratio that you can halve or whatever. It's $100 for 10 TB and all the network servicing and support apparatus, which doesn't change if the storage amount does.

It's not that Dropbox couldn't offer a tier for less than 100/year, it's that they don't want to. We around HN know about reducing headaches by avoiding pathologically cheap customers. Dropbox makes more profit overall by getting some of the would-be cheapos to round up to 100/year and letting the rest walk.

But that argument works the other way around as well.

If the software is already built, it would be the same dev cost to offer 50gb, or 10TB.

Sure there might be some customer support issues that don’t scale the same way, but then why not only offer customer support for higher tiers ?