I was a VPNSecure customer with a lifetime subscription that was canceled by them recently. I was annoyed by the experience, but I also admit that I paid about $25 IIRC and that was over 5 years ago.
I used it occasionally as a backup and it was nice to have, but I definitely got my monies worth.
I find it hard to believe that it’s legal to buy a company, but not it’s contractual obligations. Seems line a hell of a loophole for getting out of things you don’t want to do.
They claim they didn’t bought the contractual obligations, so to be fair they should cancel all subscription and not just the lifetime subscriptions. But obviously it’s just a bullshit claim by some corpo…
If the customers came across in the transaction, so did the contractual obligations. You can’t have it both ways.
Capitalism at work baby
Probably legal (for the buying company) but customers should sue the original company and get paid out of the money used to buy it.
This would almost certainly depend on the contracts themselves.
Contracts always have some bullshit like: “We can do whatever the fuck we want. Service not guaranteed. We have the right to refuse service to anyone. Lifetime is defined by the lifetime of the service which is defined by us. Can change at anytime.”
I have stopped buying lifetime subscriptions to cloud services unless they pay off within a year or two since you can’t guarantee that they’ll be honoured. Any longer and you stand to lose too much money.
Good advice in general; even contractual fuckery aside, you can’t guarantee a company will even still exist this time next year.
The only time it paid off for me was for VPN Unlimited and Plex and even then, I barely use the former and Plex is being enshittified.
Same is true for any tech thing. Sure, you can buy a perpetual licence for something but if you’re running it on anything but an isolated device then you will at minimum need security updates or the source code to fix it yourself. Same is true for things like console games where eventually the hardware will just die and it may become too expensive to replace it. Even emulation is case-by-case since some games use obscure calls which have no adequate emulation. Software doesn’t exist in isolation. For that, you have to revert to pen, paper and some analog tech.
Do you have a nebula subscription? If yes, what is your opinion of their lifetime tier?
I can’t convince myself for the 300 dollar lifetime but do realize i would totally get the hours out of it.
I just have the regular subscription. I wouldn’t pay for the lifetime one. I want to support them but I am not confident enough that they’ll be around for the long term since video hosting is a hard business to make money from.
I’ve had a nebula subscription for a couple years, and honestly I don’t think the lifetime subscription is worth it. If you can find a deal on a year plan it’s crazy cheap, and I don’t think nebula is big enough to be certain it’ll still be relevant by the time a lifetime plan would pay itself off. Maybe if it got more popular, but its place as a more specialized type of video platform, and especially a subscription based one, makes me a bit doubtful that it’ll grow significantly any time soon.
Simplelogin just opened up their lifetime subscription deal. I think I calculated it and it will pay off in 4 or 5 years. I don’t think I will get it though since I have proton unlimited already
The provider the article is taking about is VPNSecure.