Reddit makes something like a dollar fifty per user, per year. They’re not actually making a huge amount of money off their user base.
Reddit makes something like a dollar fifty per user, per year. They’re not actually making a huge amount of money off their user base.
I think the actual story here is more interesting than the joke, to be honest. Where did this happen?
From my understanding, the movie is pretty close to what actually happened.
😎
Speed limits are more like suggestions in the states anyway, this is just taking it to it’s logical extreme.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannonball_Run_challenge
Are you sure about that second one?
Yeah, because we don’t particularly fancy being lectured by teenagers on the Internet.
Yes, very conclusive. Much evidence.
You know, there’s only one side to this conflict that has a written policy to exterminate the other.
I massacred an entire music festival.
Oh wait, that was the other guys.
Fair enough, I don’t get why paying for just YouTube isn’t an option.
I’ve been paying for Premium for quite a long time, it’s good value if you use both Music and YouTube.
Or, you could complain on the Internet.
No, but having a handful of people who will never see their ads devalues the whole package.
How? How do they profit off someone who refuses to view ads?
Who would pay for data on a person you can’t advertise to?
I don’t think they’ll care or miss you, to be honest. It’s not like they’re making money off you.
I wonder if there is a job where you test user interfaces by deliberately misunderstanding instructions? I feel I’d be good at it.
If it’s a community you’re passionate about, I don’t see the issue myself.