YNAB
Libro.fm - Audiobooks but (unlike Audible) you can download drm-free audio files to listen however you want.
I actually pay for quite a few digital service subscriptions. Off the top my head: Proton (email/VPN), Mega (storage), Kagi (search engine), Inoreader (feed aggregator), Signal (both voluntary donation and for online backup), Audible (audiobooks), Reuters (news), a few newspaper and magazines (online editions), some apps, …
Internet, the shit show is 24/7 no need to pay more for anything.
Mullvad, and a strong internet connection from the spyware company of your choice. With that you can pirate any media, and browse the internet. I have never needed more.
The only extra subscriptions I have are a VPN while I’m at school, a domain name for my portfolio, and one game that is the main place I interact with my friends. Also have a slightly larger Google drive until I can afford to make my own NAS.
Honestly, I don’t see the need for much more. Costco is great if you live near one (they are one of the few decent companies left). Server hosting for games is another one I’ve done in the past.
Adobe used to be manageable a decade ago, especially if you were sharing the cost. Same with Game Pass when it came out. Now the prices for both are absurd. Streaming has been replaced by the high seas.
Email, Nebula, Dropout, Borgbase, a domain name.
I also have humble choice, but that’s a bit of a tossup. I’ve found some great games through it that I still play, but most months it still feels worth it to me
Edit: Forgot Mullvad VPN! Love that thing, 15/10 would recommend. Reddit doesn’t like it, but also I don’t like reddit so whatever
Electricity has been a pretty good subscription. Zero sales or promos ever though.
It was an expensive service, so we started to self host. It’s been pretty good since then.
What? We get sales, like every night.
Not everywhere has variable electricity pricing like that. Actually I’d guess it’s still uncommon.
For the amount of work it does heck yeah.
But we also pay 40-50c per KWH so it really stacks up quick.
Library membership
You pay to use the library or what??
VPN
And if you want a double whammy, get keepsolid, it’s a Ukrainian company. So you’re supporting Ukraine and getting a good vpn provider.
Email to avoid email providers from companies like Google or Microsoft.
It’s a great deal too! My own domain was 50€ for 10 years, and Purelymail hosting is 10 bucks per year.
Whats some good ones?
I use Tutanota with a private domain, but you can get a free address with them also.
I’m still using the services of Big Email, which means I’m the product in this setting. From a philosophical standpoint, that sucks. From a practical point of view, I don’t really see any downsides. Surely there are some that I’m just not aware of.
If they want to show me some ads, I have ublock origin and NextDNS to take care of that. What else should I know about my situation?
From a practical point of view, I don’t really see any downsides.
Studies have shown that you see worse online prices than I do, because they know what you are going to buy next and they have a good guess the maximum amount you are willing to pay.
VPNs aren’t enough to solve this, but you may be unaffected if you have other strong anti-fingerprinting habits, including routinely deleting all cookies and disabling JavaScript.
A terrible
The worstthing they could be doing is providing an annual report to potential employers on how much money you make, helping your employers minimize how much they pay you. Of course, Visa could also be doing this.The other thing they could be doing is sharing your health history, ethnicity, and any religious or political leanings with potential employers, health insurers, or governments.
In certain cases (cough the USA) we know the government has a legal right to a wire tap, if any of the servers are inside the USA.
How much any of that could affect you long term depends on who has power where, of course.
Sorry to drop all this for you. It got to where I didn’t feel the risk was worth it for free email, for me. I wish I had jumped to a privacy respecting solution sooner, since I don’t know how long my data will take to age out of their systems.
Edit: Sorry…I realized I used the word “worst” pretty lightly here. Worst is more like…https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_and_the_Holocaust
I already use several Firefox forks for different purposes, and all of them are reasonably resistant to fingerprinting. I also have a special container for all the corpo trash I have to deal with. When I click a random news articles on Lemmy, those sites are opened in a different container and their creepy cookies get deleted as soon as I close the tab.
I’m doing all of this out of of philosophical reasons. It’s also pretty easy to set up, and there are hardly any downsides. Disabling java script is something I have tried too, but it did come with all sorts of severe downsides, so that’s where I had to draw the line.
Regardless, I still find the idea of a privacy respecting email appealing. Philosophical reasons again… Recently, I also made a quick and dirty risk assessment about the potential risks, and I still didn’t see an urgent need to mitigate them. The practical side of it still requires a bit more reading before I can justify an ongoing expense like this. Naturally, the email provider would have to be EU based.
They get access to all emails used for banking, shopping, social media accounts, etc. Depends on if you are fine with them being able to build a detailed profile off your emails.
Ads is like the least problematic aspect.
Your email is the root of your digital identity, and pretty much everything in your digital life is tied to it. If your email is provided by Big Email, they own your digital identity and it exists at their whim, with no recourse if it gets taken away, compromised, or abused.
If you own your domain and pay for mail hosting, you can at least move your email between providers if something goes wrong, and have some recourse with those providers since you’re a customer instead of a product.
You have zero privacy and also generate power for them to do the things they do, which is gargle trump’s sharty grey scrote and thus empower trump
Mobile data.
Your own email domain + an account at a privacy respecting email service is more than worth it. Avoids the privacy nightmare that is using Google/Microsoft for your email, and gives you the flexibility to change email providers on a whim if your current one starts doing anything you don’t like.
Nebula is pretty cool, though I have the lifetime pass. Or patreon.
Nebula really is great.
Yes!
To me, the long form video tours of various trains around the world on Nebula are worth the monthly subscription.
And Abolish Everything is freaking hilarious.
And of course the JetLag crew keep producing some of the best gamified tourism content. Although I’m also quite partial to Downey Express, nexuses because there’s so many trains. But anyway, that’s on Nebula, too.
For those (like me) who didn’t know what it was, Nebula is a creator-owned and operated video streaming service.
I’m happy to give Qobuz my money for providing an excellent music library and be the best paying streaming service for the musicians that I listen to.
Their recommendations are from notable people in that genre too, properly curated recommendations and playlists.
They also have a strong AI charter that AI generated music must be labeled as such, similar to how Steam works. Hopefully soon you will be able to filter it out if you want to from searches.
I switched from you-know-who to Tidal and while I appreciate the sound quality the UI kinda sticks. How are you finding Qobuz?
I made the same journey. Used Tidal 1-2 years but never felt quite comfortable with it. The one that shall not be mentioned have got a lot in the UI right.
I’m still quite new to Qobuz but I like it much better. Their recommendations are much better, the search is much better, more info about fringe artists and sometimes albums too. Some bands/artists with the same name have confused albums but it’s expected and okay I think.
Over all I’d say that Tidal is a great streaming service but Qobuz has music nerd appeal that reminds me of walking into my favourite record stores and chatting about new releases and recommendations from somebody that actually cares.
Getting back to you question, I see room for improvement but I’m much more comfy with Qobuz than I ever was with Tidal.
I might give Q a try in that case, thanks
I must choose community over convenience, I must choose community over convenience, I must…
I think Qobuz feels much more premium than the two others. And at least for me, Qobuz Connect works like what I was missing from Sp_tify Connect when using Tidal.
I switched from you-know-who to Tidal and while I appreciate the sound quality the UI kinda sticks. How are you finding Qobuz?










