this post was submitted on 04 Jul 2023
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Advertisements seemed to be the way until recently, where it doesn't seem like advertising is at all a valid way to make money.

Crypto mining, while good tech, was abused far too much to where any ethical solutions made are just going to be tacked into the same category as the unethical ones.

Subscriptions are popping up a lot more, but I'm not sure that's the best way to do things.

Donations seems like a valid way, but that relies on people actually caring enough to find something.

For the sake of discussion, let's talk about smaller websites/businesses as opposed to huge companies like The Hard R, Amazon, etc…

How do you think the web should be monetized?

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Advertising is a valid way to make money, it just stopped being a way to make enough money for the typical scenarios (low-effort individual hosting, VC-forced growth).

Compute, storage and bandwidth have all significantly lowered in price over time, but moderation and hosting costs haven't as internet proliferation, legal requirements and media standards kept growing.

There hasn't been much focus in keeping costs low.
The most effective workflow for working with JavaScript is now installing a separate OS to install an installer for another virtual machine that installs an installer for an installer that installs build tools which install installers for dependencies to build 10 lines of code. Docker singlehandedly made "It works on my machine!" "Then ship the entire machine!" into a dogma.