Even "No thanks" is fine!
Are the signups you get really worth driving away most first-time visitors?
That being said, this is a super helpful list!
An obviously bad monetization strategy is more of a warning sign than no monetization strategy at all.
They were very popular until they went out of business.
They weren't cheap either! I think €99 or even €199, but don't remember well. It was around 8 years ago.
I would suggest moving the source column on the table. At first I found it hard to read as the primary data I'm looking for is the service, not the source.
Also, remove your obnoxious newsletter popup, especially with the "No thanks, i hate to save money" dismiss...
Long story short I decided to buy a service called Windscribe 2 years ago anyway after reading some reddit replies (it's a lifetime deal) and so far my experience has been amazing. It's actually better than some monthly paid services I've used and the only service that allows me to watch Netflix US. So exceptions are there though it's only been 2 years using them.. so fingers crossed!
It also tries to spin up the GPU, ruining battery life.
I am curious if you've actually tried all of these, or if you're just going with whatever offers affiliate money, because a decent number are either pretty much ad-packed open source projects being sold with a windows GUI/the type of stuff you see on clickbank with a landing page that looks like spam/actual garbage/run by criminals.
That said I will generally avoid ‘award winning’ software I’ve never heard of (after buying one Appsumo product I realised the software was a dud) and I also avoid any critical services (lifetime 10Tb cloud backup for $5... no way)
* Thanks, but I hate saving money
Got this full-screen popup with no close button not 5 seconds in. This is not acceptable. It’s obnoxious and disrespectful.
Flagged the whole thing.
I do wish you the best!
My main idea is to find every single deal online that is labeled lifetime deal, and share it in a simple, searchable, sortable overview list. The list will contain my affiliate links, so I can hopefully some day earn more money from the site than I spend. If you have other suggestions to how to label things so people do not get fooled, let me know. If you think the best thing is to delete the site from existance, then I will actually think about doing so. I had a hope it was possible to show a list of links online, be they affiliate links, in some way so that it could still be useful. But maybe it is not.
It would be more work but I would much rather look at a list of curated services that are also affiliate links that tell me why they are good and maybe a pros/cons/alternative-to-x table. If I am looking for a completely uncurated list I could go to stacksocial and search for the word lifetime. A short 1-2 sentences would at least tide me over as to what the product does.
It is less about the fooled, but more that quite a lot of that list is garbage software, the kind you see included in adware installers as trials - like the PDF converters, the lying VPN providers that won't actually last a lifetime, I'm trying to find a list of deals that specifically removes these.
As a dev I am sick of marketing bullshit and believe none of it, prefer spec sheets and seeing the code myself, competent engineer support, when I see a newsletter popup I immediately exit, when I see adblock telling me it's blocking a hundred things and also seeing stuff trying to run flash my first thought is malware. When I see "unlimited backup storage for life" my first thought is that bandwidth and power and cooling is a recurring cost and that unlimited doesn't exist.
I would assume a "normal user" would convert better to newsletter things (otherwise why would they keep getting used), social media liking and group chat (I block all like buttons, follow buttons, etc.), click through happily and upload 3 GB to their "unlimited backup" plan..