Also good for composting and making room in your recycling bin

  • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3 months ago

    Oh definitely, I just think it’s easier to justify paying for a physical product than it is paying for a single file if you still need to manufacture it yourself. Still a valid business practice, I’m just biased toward “information should be free” and all that.

    • Captainvaqina@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      It’s $3 which is well worth the time saved by not having to design it from scratch.

      Someone had to use their skills to create it, do you think they should work for free?

      • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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        3 months ago

        I don’t disagree, never said people should work for free. I recognize there’s a disjoint in believing good information should be free[ly accessible] and also that people deserve compensation for work, though. It’s just one of those contradictions I haven’t solved as far as my own beliefs.

        More than anything I was complaining, like I said it’s a totally valid business choice, I’m just a penny-pincher lol.

        • frezik@midwest.social
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          3 months ago

          I think there’s a way to reconcile it, but it requires people to behave themselves. It can still be under a CC license, but also behind a pay link for the author. Yes, we could get it from somewhere for free, but that takes more effort and we’re not supporting the original creator.

          This is basically mutual aid applied to non-physical goods. We know you still need to make a living in capitalism, and we’ll agree to exchange useful things for money under that system until we have a better one.

          There’s also an argument similar to the one for streaming services (the one the services themselves have forgotten in the last few years). Yes, we can pirate it, but that takes effort, the sites involved have all sorts of shady advertisements and try to infect your computer with Windows XP viruses, and we can get all we want and more for ten bucks a month.

    • scrion@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      But it’s not just information, someone sat in front of their computer and put the work in to design it, then print it and iterate.

      You’re paying for that process, and for the time and effort the person took to acquire the necessary skills.

      However, there should be a noticeable price difference due to the easy scaling / replicatibility when distributing digital goods.

      I’m with you insofar as the final product feels like it should be 3 bucks, not the file.

      • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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        3 months ago

        I replied to another response similar to yours so I won’t bore you unless you want to read more, but I mostly agree with what you said and I totally agree that the work itself to create the file is worth compensation. I’m just a penny-pinching bastard who would rather find out if the print is actually good before paying lmao.

        Pay-what-you-want, donations, and subsidizing with a higher price for the final product makes more sense to me in terms of these kinds of digital goods, but that’s besides the point, and I’m no expert on this kind of thing.

        Honestly I’d be willing to pay 5-8 bucks for the final product since it looks more polished than any of the free designs I’ve seen. But yes, fair points.

      • kellenoffdagrid❓️@lemmy.sdf.org
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        3 months ago

        That’s a fair point, I guess I think of digital goods in a different context.

        They definitely deserve compensation for their work, and how they chose to do it is absolutely valid. I think I’m biased toward open source hardware where the labor of creating their digital files is subsidized by selling the physical product instead. I realize that’s a risk and takes more effort though, so I totally understand why they didn’t do that.