As Elon Musk likes to do whenever disaster hits somewhere in the world, Hurricane Helene was another opportunity to show off his generosity and make himself part of the news. This time, Musk made headlines with a promise that SpaceX Starlink would be free for 30 days to help in places where fiber and cellular infrastructure might have been knocked offline. More than 200 people have been identified as dead in the disaster.

But the catch is that it’s really not free at all. It really looks like not much more than a glorified new-customer promotion.

For one, anyone interested in taking up the offer still has to pay approximately $400 for the dish itself (including shipping and tax) and they’re getting automatically rolled into a $120 per-month contract when the free month ends.

  • @halcyoncmdr
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    -74 hours ago

    In fact, that’s how it generally works with ISPs and the modem they provide you with when you sign up for their service.

    Your Cable/DSL modem isn’t a $400 piece of equipment, and probably sold at a loss at this point given the tech is still new. At best those ISP modems are worth maybe $100, and that’s the marked up purchase price.

    Even then, the ISPs never give it to you for free, they charge you a monthly rental fee for it unless you bring your own.

    • Flying Squid
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      64 hours ago

      Your Cable/DSL modem isn’t a $400 piece of equipment

      So what? If they don’t give it back, they owe $400.

      Even then, the ISPs never give it to you for free, they charge you a monthly rental fee for it unless you bring your own.

      Bullshit. Neither the local ISP I am using now nor shitty Spectrum when I had it charged me a dime. When we switched to the local ISP, Spectrum just wanted it back. The local ISP has a hell of a lot less money than any company Musk owns, and yet they can somehow handle giving out their equipment to tens of thousands of customers for free until they are returned.

      • @halcyoncmdr
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        -44 hours ago

        Bullshit. Neither the local ISP I am using now nor shitty Spectrum when I had it charged me a dime. When we switched to the local ISP, Spectrum just wanted it back.

        And yet companies like Comcast charge $5+ per month to rent their shitty modem, and will even charge customers who never had a rental modem at all. Your area isn’t indicative of the entire country.

        • Flying Squid
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          54 hours ago

          Spectrum literally serves the entire country.

          If Spectrum can do it, so can Musk.

          I’m just astounded you are defending marketing this deceptive.

          “Free as long as you don’t count the $400 initial cost and also you will be forced to pay $120 a month if you forget to go through all the hoops we will force you to go through in order to cancel in 30 days” is not the charitable donation you seem to think it is.

          • @halcyoncmdr
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            -54 hours ago

            not the charitable donation you seem to think it is.

            I never claimed it was a charitable donation.

            I’m just astounded you are defending marketing this deceptive.

            I’m not defending anything. The “marketing” is not deceptive. Starlink said they would provide free service… And that’s what they’re doing.

            Everyone else is assuming that would include other shit like free hardware that Starlink never claimed and has never offered free previously. There is absolutely zero reason to expect free hardware here, yet that seems to be what you all are expecting for some reason.

            • Flying Squid
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              54 hours ago

              Dude, you’re talking about a standard ISP offer. It is not any more a “free service” than any other ISP giving you one moth without paying a monthly fee. This does nothing to help hurricane victims despite it being pushed that way.

              Seriously, is the whole concept of “the first month is free if you sign up” new to you?

              • @halcyoncmdr
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                -44 hours ago

                Your right, except Starlink doesn’t offer free service to new customers normally.

                So it is something special they don’t normally do.

                • Flying Squid
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                  53 hours ago

                  So… a “special offer to new customers?”

                  Again, a very common thing that businesses do all the time regardless of a hurricane.

                  • @halcyoncmdr
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                    -33 hours ago

                    A “very common thing” that Starlink does not do.

                    You’re angry about a company offering something in the hurricane affected area that they don’t normally do with regular customers.

                    It doesn’t matter if other companies offer something similar normally to new customers, Starlink does not do this, so it is a special thing for the Hurricane areas.

                    Not sure why this is so hard for you to understand here, other than a blinding bias.