Also by free I mean without ads or similar annoyances.

  • CurlyWurlies4All
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    73 hours ago

    Because there’s no monied interests to pump the hype ahead of the rug pull.

  • @[email protected]
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    88 hours ago

    Paid services profit if they reach a broader audience so they pay people to post on forums and other social media about their services.

  • @[email protected]
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    48 hours ago

    Because we can’t agree on needs and trusted software due to liability reasons.

    The brightest minds in the field can come together and give standard recommendation for use cases using free software, but they don’t. We have billionaires who could fix this problem with a snap of a finger, but they won’t.

    Problems are profitable. You can’t sell a solution to a boring mature field.

    • @[email protected]
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      1915 hours ago

      Slightly related, I tend to look at heavily advertised products as inferior. Because really good things sell themselves, and all that marketing money ends up in the price I pay.

  • Em Adespoton
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    911 hours ago

    As a counter example, all the free/pd stuff on archive.org gets discussed pretty regularly, as does Wikipedia.

    Maybe it’s that when it’s free, people just use it or they don’t. You don’t get people saying “Hey, did you see this awesome free article on Wikipedia?” because everyone already knows that Wikipedia is CC; instead, they just mention Wikipedia without mentioning it’s free.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      211 hours ago

      Good points! Although I feel like I may be out of the loop on some of the discussion/mention of archive.org stuff, which likely speaks to me being out of it more broadly regarding discussions of other related materials.

      • Em Adespoton
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        311 hours ago

        There’s also plenty of discussion of public libraries, but since they’re all independent of each other, it’s not a unified discussion. Nobody online is going to recommend their local library to a random person from who knows where.

  • @[email protected]
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    1413 hours ago

    Because most people who use good free stuff assume everyone else is using it to… because it’s like free and shit.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      412 hours ago

      Kind of surprised there aren’t more comments along these lines. This was floating around the back of my head as much as some of the other responses.

      • @[email protected]
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        212 hours ago

        Yea, I think human perspective generally defaults to us assuming other people have had similar experiences to us so people can be blind when someone else is fully missing a big chunk of context.

  • @DragonsInARoom
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    1214 hours ago

    Because no one will make money by promoting it

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠
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    1515 hours ago

    Because no one’s going to make money off it and thus no one has a stake in promoting it.

  • Hello_there
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    1315 hours ago

    If you have kids, give them the pbs kids app on a tv. There’s no ads and the programs are vastly improved from the cocomelon AI slop you see on youtube

  • @[email protected]
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    1016 hours ago

    Oftentimes (but not always), free stuff has a lower budget and lower amounts of effort put into it by fewer people. This often results in a worse product.

  • Swordgeek
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    514 hours ago

    On review sites in particular, there are kickbacks involved - and free/OSS products can’t pay as much as for-profits.