This is Teh Way to make money on the Internet, do things for free or cheap, get popular, then raise the price. Amazon just about went out of business hoovering up customers, but they're doing okay now. On a smaller scale, I recall Rocketmail, a free email forwarding service, you could get a free email address at not just rocketmail.com, but cheerful.com, educator.com, engineer.com, and on and on. A friend was so excited "Free email for life!" Within a couple years they started charging, so you had to pay to keep your "free" forwarding email address. Maybe I'm a cynic but I wasn't surprised.
I've had a Photobucket page for the past 10 years or so, but haven't used it lately. I don't think I'll even bother deleting it.
I suppose there's something to be said for having your own domain and hosting account. I've done that off and on, but never did much with it.
bluebird said:
Unfortunately a lot of companies have succeeded like this. Look at Yelp. They really hurt a lot of businesses when they started charging them for the good reviews they got. If they didn't pay up, they took all the good reviews and left the bad reviews up. The businesses could not remove themselves from yelp. I can only imagine how frustrating that was for small business owners.
That's ... fascinating. I've heard about yelp, maybe stumbled over it in a few Google searches, but I haven't heard that. This might be 'perfectly legal' but it seems some business or collection of business would bring a civil lawsuit over ... something, defamation of character or some crap. If I had a business listed, I'd sue to have ALL reviews removed. This is almost as shitty as the Sony Rootkit.