• @Lukecis
    link
    -41 year ago

    I dont own a cellphone and get by through borrowing family member’s phones or asking strangers if I can make a call if I’m out on my own, it usually works out fairly well.

    However whenever I run into online services that require a phone to make an account or whatever I usually get screwed- so I usually just use a family member’s phone # if I know they’ll never use the site or whatever or utilize a 10 minute/fake phone # creation site if I dont care about the site or service I’m signing up for.

    • vasametropolis
      link
      131 year ago

      To be fair you are the burden on your family here. This isn’t living without - it’s sticking everyone else with your problem.

      • @hello_cruel_world
        link
        91 year ago

        That’s how I read it too. It’s not “look how well I’m doing without a smart phone”, it’s more like “I don’t want a phone, but have no issues placing the burden of my actions on others”

        It’s not him that gets consequences of a leaked number.

      • @Lukecis
        link
        -31 year ago

        Eh, I assure you the burden of buying a brand new 500~1000$ phone and then paying a monthly bill to provide it with service would be a far far greater burden then allowing me to use their phone to make important calls once a week if not less, and letting me use it to sign up to a site/video game maybe a couple times a year.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          61 year ago

          Absolutely, it’s definitely a bigger burden for you to shell out $1000 for a top of the line phone, and then pay hundreds of dollars a month for service…dude, An android phone from Dollar General is $30 and pay as you go. You’re just putting the burden off to others because you don’t want to be inconvenienced.

          • @Lukecis
            link
            11 year ago

            Well, to be honest I had no idea that cheap phones like that existed.

            Besides costs though the main reason I dont decide to get a phone is just due to all the data collection they do, plus nearly every service and government/housing/job related thing connected to me uses the family phone #, switching them over would take hours if not days of calling, settings editing or paperwork to do.

            I already pay for my family’s house, food and utilities so I don’t really see why its an issue to borrow the family’s # every now and then.

        • @dfc09
          link
          51 year ago

          If you still have good computer access, you could make a Google phone number. Pretty much what it sounds like, gives you a free phone number, you can check messages / calls all on desktop

          • @Lukecis
            link
            21 year ago

            Sounds useful, albeit probably spyware ridden but what isnt these days eh?

            I might look into using that for at least google’s services.