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this post was submitted on 14 May 2025
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I assume most companies write somewhere in their terms that "lifetime" means effectively "whenever the fuck we want".
If there is a company that uses the word lifetime properly they may be worth a mention.
I remember when AT&T had "unlimited" data when the original iPhone came out and severely underestimated how much data people used.
Today, every cell phone provider has an "unlimited" plan and in the fine print says "up to x GB, after which you will be throttled."
That shit should be illegal.
I've seen "fair use policy applies"
That shouldn’t matter
If we had the most basic of regulatory practices over businesses in this country, especially the tech industry, this practice simply wouldn’t be allowed. Even the bullshit doublespeak “life of the product” version
Lifetime means lifetime. If you can’t honor that don’t offer it. If you go back on it you should be harshly penalized.
Looking at you t mobile, rolling stone magazine, filmora, Dropbox, salesforce, mcafee, etc
This should also include if you remove features from lifetime subscriptions and make them contingent on paid monthly subscriptions (looking at you adobe, Evernote, and probably plex in 3-5 years)
No, actually that is part of the problem, they shouldn't even be allowed to advertise 'Lifetime' without explicitly stating whose lifetime.
I've seen some saying that "lifetime" refers to product lifetime, which is not expected to be more than X years. So yeah, slimes gonna slime
I guess Nebula should be meantioned then?
https://go.nebula.tv/lifetime?ref=nebulablog
It's the only company that comes to mind that still offers something like that.
They often tie it to current offerings. So your plan may have unlimited 4G data for life, but won't include anything faster/newer. So once you want/need 5G, you have to switch to a different plan.