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HOST-C Unilaterally Cancels Paid Services

124

Comments

  • ralfralf Member
    edited August 2025

    @host_c said:
    The core issue is exactly what @ralf mentioned:

    "I'm now convinced that it's probably better to just buy stuff as and when you need it, and pay whatever the price is at that point. Another way of looking at it is that even a 10% discount isn't much more than 1 month free over the year. If you're going to idle something for months, it's probably not worth it."

    A lot of people—not just our customers—buy services they don’t actively use. When prices increase, updating all those idle resources becomes a chore, and understandably, people get frustrated. But if you’ve bought 30 VPSs and only use a handful, that’s not on the host—that’s on the buyer. Cancel what you don’t need and move on.

    When I first read this, this didn't sit quite right with me, and a couple of hours later I still feel the same. I know you're not a native speaker, and so maybe this is just a poor choice of word and you don't feel the same nuance, but "chore" seems really off here.

    I get that maintenance work is annoying and not that much fun, but it's all part and parcel of the job, and part of your obligations resulting from agreeing to offer the service. Most of this maintenance work also doesn't directly affect the customer, it affects you as a business owner - so migration from old machines to newer more efficient ones, you do because it saves you money in the long run - it's worth paying to upgrade a server if it saves you on electricity and you can break even in e.g. 2 years. But all of that is irrelevant to the customer, who just wants the service they bought and nothing else.

    But the comment "updating all those idle resources becomes a chore" feels like you believe the customer is wasting your time by having all these resources they don't need, causing you to have to migrate them elsewhere, but in reality the opposite is true. Having them idle resources gives you a steady revenue stream for a service that can literally be put anywhere because the customer is barely using any resources. An upgrade for you isn't necessarily an upgrade to them, it's just continuation of service.

    There's also the implication that a customer with "all those idle resources" is somehow less important than any other customer. Sure, it might be a VPS they've forgotten all about (I've done it more than once), or it could be something really important. For example, it might be an emergency shell account used to ssh somewhere on a whitelisted IP that only gets used if their primary jumphost fails, I have a VPS that only runs DNS but it's important that it keeps running and I don't care if it's overspecified for its job - all that's important to me is that the DNS it's serving remains available. So what that it has 20GB NVMe and 4GB RAM, and I'm using less than 512MB RAM, a few GB disk and less than 1% CPU?

    As a provider, you shouldn't look down on these instances as being pointless, you should just be thankful that they're not using many TB/m of network and that you can put lots on a single host because they're not using many resources.

  • x1archx1arch Member
    edited August 2025

    @host_c said:
    Hi @Cybr,

    I have nothing against running Lifetime products—good for those who do—but I personally don't see the math working out for sustaining hardware long-term under that model.

    Since we started about two years ago, we've found that the average lifespan of a product is around three years, which is acceptable. However, anything beyond that becomes a challenge to keep running and properly maintained.

    For this reason, we don’t offer lifetime deals. Too much can change in just 3–5 years—performance expectations, infrastructure costs, hardware lifecycle, etc.

    If some customers assumed certain plans were "lifetime," I’m sorry to disappoint—but nothing lasts forever.

    Also, I have no intention of maintaining decades-old hardware. The current Xeon Scalable Gen 2s are approaching that threshold, but at least they still deliver decent performance. I won’t even start a debate on the E5-V4 series; they served us well, but it's time to move on before performance degrades and maintaining them becomes a support nightmare. Some may not understand our decision, and that’s fine. Most of the frustration seems to come from the few dollars required to upgrade—which is fair.

    The core issue is exactly what @ralf mentioned:

    "I'm now convinced that it's probably better to just buy stuff as and when you need it, and pay whatever the price is at that point. Another way of looking at it is that even a 10% discount isn't much more than 1 month free over the year. If you're going to idle something for months, it's probably not worth it."

    A lot of people—not just our customers—buy services they don’t actively use. When prices increase, updating all those idle resources becomes a chore, and understandably, people get frustrated. But if you’ve bought 30 VPSs and only use a handful, that’s not on the host—that’s on the buyer. Cancel what you don’t need and move on.

    No hosting provider will keep old hardware in production just to satisfy customers who overbought. Whether it’s 1, 12, or 24 extra instances—it’s unrealistic. ( if some do, Respect )

    That said, I’m actually pleased with how this transition has turned out. It taught us an important lesson: be extremely specific in future communications.

    But this will have its consequences—our next E5-V4 phase-out will have a 90-day notice, not 1.5 years. Honestly, 1.5 years? What was I thinking? 😄

    One final note: since we offer high IOPS on these low-cost plans, we’ll be splitting them into two storage tiers soon: ( and this is due to the amount of abuse some do )

    Basic – RAID 60

    Performance – RAID 10

    More details coming later this month.

    We will not alter the specs of any existing products already sold. However, all future sales will be split between these two categories accordingly.

    EDIT:

    We wish to get $$ of customers while providing the best thing We can do at that price point.

    We cannot do that with devices that fail to deliver, end of story.

    Why you need update e5? This is storage vps, I not expecting very powerful vps, while I need just upload my backup. Maybe some clients need it, but not for the most, I believe. If you positioning host_c as data storage provider, I believe powerful of the server is not matter. For me, have not difference is it works on 1 vcpu of E5 or Epyc or something else. And I totally sure the support of old system is cheaper than last gen, only if capacity of new one more than old one, but lots of hosters still provide E5 plans. I believe you use external storage systems and connect it to hosts over Infinity Blade or something like that. Am I wrong?

    PS I believe $$ clients don't like the history when their plan price will change because the hoster wants update their hardware. They need stable, they plan for years to the future.

    PPS I believe the $57 for 5Tb still very reasonable price, but the tendency is a little bit confused me.

  • skorousskorous Member
    edited August 2025

    @ralf said: When I first read this, this didn't sit quite right with me, and a couple of hours later I still feel the same. I know you're not a native speaker, and so maybe this is just a poor choice of word and you don't feel the same nuance, but "chore" seems really off here.

    You might want to re-read what he said as I believe you've misread what he said/meant. The "chore" is customer side not provider.

    Thanked by 1ralf
  • ralfralf Member

    @skorous said:

    @ralf said: When I first read this, this didn't sit quite right with me, and a couple of hours later I still feel the same. I know you're not a native speaker, and so maybe this is just a poor choice of word and you don't feel the same nuance, but "chore" seems really off here.

    You might want to re-read what he said as I believe you've misread what he said/meant. The "chore" is customer side not provider.

    Oh yeah good point, I hadn't even considered that interpretation. Reading it that way makes sense. Sorry @host_c !

    Thanked by 1host_c
  • host_chost_c Patron Provider, Top Host, Megathread Squad

    A lot of people—not just our customers—buy services they don’t actively use. When prices increase, updating all those idle resources becomes a chore, and understandably, people get frustrated. But if you’ve bought 30 VPSs and only use a handful, that’s not on the host—that’s on the buyer. Cancel what you don’t need and move on.

    In the above context, chore = effort/burden

    updating all those idle resources becomes a burden/effort, and understandably.......

  • DediRockDediRock Member, Patron Provider

    okay that's a tough situation, do you happen to know the owner over there? or who is your rep?

  • zedzed Member

    @DediRock said:
    okay that's a tough situation, do you happen to know the owner over there? or who is your rep?

    I think your chatbot broke.

  • DediRockDediRock Member, Patron Provider

    @zed said:

    @DediRock said:
    okay that's a tough situation, do you happen to know the owner over there? or who is your rep?

    I think your chatbot broke.

    no chatbot here Zed all original content :) most of the hosting companies that I have done business with, I always knew the owners and could get things resolved pretty quickly.

  • @host_c said: But if you’ve bought 30 VPSs and only use a handful, that’s not on the host—that’s on the buyer. Cancel what you don’t need and move on.

    This is not how you stay afloat in LET market.
    You want, I would even say you need people to idle those servers. If they start using them all they will explode those servers. Overload, explode, dicks goes byebye.

    People like @FAT32 are your best clients - he probably have no idea how many servers he have, all of them idling, using almost 0 resources.

  • host_chost_c Patron Provider, Top Host, Megathread Squad

    @JabJab said:

    @host_c said: But if you’ve bought 30 VPSs and only use a handful, that’s not on the host—that’s on the buyer. Cancel what you don’t need and move on.

    This is not how you stay afloat in LET market.
    You want, I would even say you need people to idle those servers. If they start using them all they will explode those servers. Overload, explode, dicks goes byebye.

    People like @FAT32 are your best clients - he probably have no idea how many servers he have, all of them idling, using almost 0 resources.

    Oh I think he knows how many he has :smiley:

    :+1: the reply

    Thanked by 1FAT32
  • FAT32FAT32 Administrator, Deal Compiler Extraordinaire

    @host_c said:

    @JabJab said:

    @host_c said: But if you’ve bought 30 VPSs and only use a handful, that’s not on the host—that’s on the buyer. Cancel what you don’t need and move on.

    This is not how you stay afloat in LET market.
    You want, I would even say you need people to idle those servers. If they start using them all they will explode those servers. Overload, explode, dicks goes byebye.

    People like @FAT32 are your best clients - he probably have no idea how many servers he have, all of them idling, using almost 0 resources.

    Oh I think he knows how many he has :smiley:

    :+1: the reply

    Ya but how many am I using is another question

  • host_chost_c Patron Provider, Top Host, Megathread Squad

    @FAT32 said:

    @host_c said:

    @JabJab said:

    @host_c said: But if you’ve bought 30 VPSs and only use a handful, that’s not on the host—that’s on the buyer. Cancel what you don’t need and move on.

    This is not how you stay afloat in LET market.
    You want, I would even say you need people to idle those servers. If they start using them all they will explode those servers. Overload, explode, dicks goes byebye.

    People like @FAT32 are your best clients - he probably have no idea how many servers he have, all of them idling, using almost 0 resources.

    Oh I think he knows how many he has :smiley:

    :+1: the reply

    Ya but how many am I using is another question

    Never said nothing about usage, that is confidential. :wink:

    Thanked by 1FAT32
  • @jsg said:

    @fly056 said:

    @jsg said:

    @fly056 said:

    @host_c said:
    @jsg

    This gave ma an idea, let me see if we find something older then a G5 from HP, tho I doubt we can virtualise a 32 bit CPU. ( remember it worked in VMWARE 4 ) not sure about proxmox.

    I might revive an old style server for some that wish to have something really old. ( or just migrate abusers there :D :) )

    Give them a dedi 386dx.

    NOOOO! That would be an even worse crime than giving refunds to unhappy customers!

    It's just a bit of generosity from @host_c.

    You didn't fully read this thread I presume. Otherwise you'd know that wokiwizi (or whatever OP calls him/her/them/ze-self) was angry about @host_c (the evil, merciless, brutal provider) refunding him/her/them/ze/it!

    I'm afraid that what you call "just a bit of generosity" from host_c would be way more than some woke snowflakes can take! And we don't want to ignite a revolution, do we!

    I enjoyed the journey of the read, but I was just excited about a 386dx.

    Thanked by 2ralf jsg
  • host_chost_c Patron Provider, Top Host, Megathread Squad

    @fly056 said:

    @jsg said:

    @fly056 said:

    @jsg said:

    @fly056 said:

    @host_c said:
    @jsg

    This gave ma an idea, let me see if we find something older then a G5 from HP, tho I doubt we can virtualise a 32 bit CPU. ( remember it worked in VMWARE 4 ) not sure about proxmox.

    I might revive an old style server for some that wish to have something really old. ( or just migrate abusers there :D :) )

    Give them a dedi 386dx.

    NOOOO! That would be an even worse crime than giving refunds to unhappy customers!

    It's just a bit of generosity from @host_c.

    You didn't fully read this thread I presume. Otherwise you'd know that wokiwizi (or whatever OP calls him/her/them/ze-self) was angry about @host_c (the evil, merciless, brutal provider) refunding him/her/them/ze/it!

    I'm afraid that what you call "just a bit of generosity" from host_c would be way more than some woke snowflakes can take! And we don't want to ignite a revolution, do we!

    I enjoyed the journey of the read, but I was just excited about a 386dx.

    Lol

    However, i sent out some reqests to some friends.

    I am waiting to see what dinosaurs they have left on inventory.

    Thanked by 1fly056
  • FAT32FAT32 Administrator, Deal Compiler Extraordinaire

    @host_c said:

    @fly056 said:

    @jsg said:

    @fly056 said:

    @jsg said:

    @fly056 said:

    @host_c said:
    @jsg

    This gave ma an idea, let me see if we find something older then a G5 from HP, tho I doubt we can virtualise a 32 bit CPU. ( remember it worked in VMWARE 4 ) not sure about proxmox.

    I might revive an old style server for some that wish to have something really old. ( or just migrate abusers there :D :) )

    Give them a dedi 386dx.

    NOOOO! That would be an even worse crime than giving refunds to unhappy customers!

    It's just a bit of generosity from @host_c.

    You didn't fully read this thread I presume. Otherwise you'd know that wokiwizi (or whatever OP calls him/her/them/ze-self) was angry about @host_c (the evil, merciless, brutal provider) refunding him/her/them/ze/it!

    I'm afraid that what you call "just a bit of generosity" from host_c would be way more than some woke snowflakes can take! And we don't want to ignite a revolution, do we!

    I enjoyed the journey of the read, but I was just excited about a 386dx.

    Lol

    However, i sent out some reqests to some friends.

    I am waiting to see what dinosaurs they have left on inventory.

    Me dinosaur you say?

    Thanked by 2HuiW JohnnySac
  • host_chost_c Patron Provider, Top Host, Megathread Squad

    @FAT32 said: Me dinosaur you say?

    Naa, was not referring to you.

    It seems that the oldest we found is some 5XXXX series, ( Gen5 HP for example ) not old enough.

    So I did put up a to-do list stuff, the second I will find some Pentium 1,2 or some AMD K6/ Cytrix 6X86 stuff, I will Dremel it onto a case and put it up to an auction :D

    Thanked by 3fly056 FAT32 jsg
  • CybrCybr Member

    @host_c said:
    Hi @Cybr,

    I have nothing against running Lifetime products—good for those who do—but I personally don't see the math working out for sustaining hardware long-term under that model.

    Since we started about two years ago, we've found that the average lifespan of a product is around three years, which is acceptable. However, anything beyond that becomes a challenge to keep running and properly maintained.

    For this reason, we don’t offer lifetime deals. Too much can change in just 3–5 years—performance expectations, infrastructure costs, hardware lifecycle, etc.

    If some customers assumed certain plans were "lifetime," I’m sorry to disappoint—but nothing lasts forever.

    To clarify, when I was referred to the "lifetime" products I have with a few different providers in my response to someone else in this thread, I was talking about true lifetime products which have a once-off large payment and no recurring fee at all. Those are ideal for long term backups as there's no possibility of a renewal being missed.

    I wouldn't call a product that doesn't have random price hikes "lifetime". That's just a normal product, and what I consider an industry standard, with any provider who does increases for existing services being an outlier.

    Out of the last ~50 providers I've had servers with, the only one I can think of that did price increases for existing services was Hetzner, and I got rid of my Hetzner servers when they did that.

    Myself and many others expect recurring charges to be predictable. I won't even consider an offer that has no recurring discount, or one with limited discounts only for the first X renewals.

    I intend to keep most of the services I get for the foreseeable future. I have a few dedicated servers that I got 13+ years ago, including even a 4th gen i7 from OVH which I'm paying $87/mo for even though they sell the same hardware for $15 now (since I need to retain the primary IP and OVH refuses to adjust the price of an existing service).

    I suggest you clearly state time limit terms for the recurring price of your services when offering deals in future, so that customers aren't surprised when you do price hikes.

  • This entire thread is just fucking depressing. @host_c already provides dirt cheap services, and is generally willing to work with people. They refunded the $6, and gave the same offer as everyone else got: stay on legacy hardware til the end, or pay a bit more and migrate. It's still a stupid good deal. The amount of "you should state this or put this in your terms or do this or eat the cost because i want to save $5" is just... seriously disheartening.

    Thanked by 2host_c jsg
  • host_chost_c Patron Provider, Top Host, Megathread Squad
    edited August 2025

    @Cybr said: I suggest you clearly state time limit terms for the recurring price of your services when offering deals in future, so that customers aren't surprised when you do price hikes.

    take it with a grain of salt:

    I also wish for GOV and Politics and markets to provide me stable same prices for the next decade so I can do the same towards my customers. deal? :D

    Just a question here:

    Does your Phone ISP company do price index once a year?
    Does your Barber do a price adjustment 2-3 times a year?
    Does the price of gas change in your country 1 / moth?

    should I go on or you got my point. So basically you want a fixed price in a dynamic environment for the next 5 years? did I got your point? - and this is not related to whatever is going on in this tread, as a general rule I asked. ???

    Nevertheless, this is all about phasing out hardware and going to something newer. You can stay on the old one until it gets decommissioned or move forward, your choice not my, and again folks, ~1.5 Years heads up, man, lol, I will pull the 90 day card on the next ones.

    Thanked by 1jsg
  • CybrCybr Member
    edited August 2025

    @host_c said:

    @Cybr said: I suggest you clearly state time limit terms for the recurring price of your services when offering deals in future, so that customers aren't surprised when you do price hikes.

    take it with a grain of salt:

    I also wish for GOV and Politics and markets to provide me stable same prices for the next decade so I can do the same towards my customers. deal? :D

    Just a question here:

    Does your Phone ISP company do price index once a year?
    Does your Barber do a price adjustment 2-3 times a year?
    Does the price of gas change in your country 1 / moth?

    should I go on or you got my point. So basically you want a fixed price in a dynamic environment for the next 5 years? did I got your point? - and this is not related to whatever is going on in this tread, as a general rule I asked. ???

    Nevertheless, this is all about phasing out hardware and going to something newer. You can stay on the old one until it gets decommissioned or move forward, your choice not my, and again folks, ~1.5 Years heads up, man, lol, I will pull the 90 day card on the next ones.

    Don't get me wrong, I get that price adjustments are sometimes unavoidable in order to keep your services sustainable, especially when there are considerable external cost increases in the country.

    Your ~1.5 years grace period for the price hike is also more than reasonable.

    My only point was that, in my experience, it's very rare to see increases of existing virtual servers, especially in the low end market. Providers usually only increase the price of newly ordered services, rewarding loyal customers and covering the costs of new gen hardware with a combination of new orders and power efficiency savings of the new hardware.

  • @host_c said: Also, there are a few dozen E5-V4 services running on Scale Gen 2, why? well, the shit automation we use provisioned them there, so they will be moved back to the corresponding E5-V4 Node.

    Apparently I'm one of those, as I got a message out of the blue today asking if I want to upgrade to Scale 2. When I checked both of my services, I found they are already running on Intel Gold CPUs, so I was confused about what needs to be upgraded.

    I (and I assume others in my situation) didn't receive any of your emails about retirement of the E5 CPU family or the price increase required to keep our servers. So I was completely in the dark on this.

    You might want to find out who those people are and make sure they are sent the right emails to avoid similar surprises.

  • @Cybr said: Providers usually only increase the price of newly ordered services, rewarding loyal customers and covering the costs of new gen hardware with a combination of new orders and power efficiency savings of the new hardware.

    I have to say @hosthatch is an excellent example of this. I've got multiple services with them that have been migrated over the years from slower to faster CPUs (Intel E5 to AMD Epyc) and better storage infrastructure (RAID 50/60 to RAID 10), and I'm still paying the same price. I fully expected they would ask for extra money to migrate to their new storage servers, but they didn't.

    I don't expect every provider can do this, but HostHatch deserves particular praise in my opinion.

    Thanked by 3fly056 Cybr host_c
  • @Cybr said: That's just a normal product, and what I consider an industry standard, with any provider who does increases for existing services being an outlier.

    +1

    Thanked by 1host_c
  • jsgjsg Member, Resident Benchmarker
    edited August 2025

    @aj_potc said:

    @Cybr said: Providers usually only increase the price of newly ordered services, rewarding loyal customers and covering the costs of new gen hardware with a combination of new orders and power efficiency savings of the new hardware.

    I have to say @hosthatch is an excellent example of this. I've got multiple services with them that have been migrated over the years from slower to faster CPUs (Intel E5 to AMD Epyc) and better storage infrastructure (RAID 50/60 to RAID 10), and I'm still paying the same price. I fully expected they would ask for extra money to migrate to their new storage servers, but they didn't.

    I don't expect every provider can do this, but HostHatch deserves particular praise in my opinion.

    Fun fact: So did Contabo and highly likely a few others as well. The reason, I guess, isn't sheer benevolence but rather a mix of factors, presumably some benevolence being one of them, but mainly some others, more pragmatical ones like e.g. electrical power cost. I think that many still underestimate the size of that cost factor.

    That said, I of course agree and am pleased as well when a provider not only doesn't rise the price of a product but actually also increases its performance.

    But still, I've yet to see another storage provider who offers very high reliability, very good quality, really decent support at ridiculously low prices like @host_c does. And if such a provider occasionally adapts their prices to a significantly changed context I have no problem with that, especially when also better performance comes with the price change.

    Thanked by 1host_c
  • ziwiwizziwiwiz Member
    edited August 2025

    @host_c said:

    @Cybr said: I suggest you clearly state time limit terms for the recurring price of your services when offering deals in future, so that customers aren't surprised when you do price hikes.

    take it with a grain of salt:

    I also wish for GOV and Politics and markets to provide me stable same prices for the next decade so I can do the same towards my customers. deal? :D

    Just a question here:

    Does your Phone ISP company do price index once a year?
    Does your Barber do a price adjustment 2-3 times a year?
    Does the price of gas change in your country 1 / moth?

    should I go on or you got my point. So basically you want a fixed price in a dynamic environment for the next 5 years? did I got your point? - and this is not related to whatever is going on in this tread, as a general rule I asked. ???

    Nevertheless, this is all about phasing out hardware and going to something newer. You can stay on the old one until it gets decommissioned or move forward, your choice not my, and again folks, ~1.5 Years heads up, man, lol, I will pull the 90 day card on the next ones.

    @host_c
    I totally get the idea of raising prices when upgrading hardware — that’s understandable. Better hardware costs more, and users can decide whether to stick around or move on. That’s just how things work.

    What confused me (and a few others) is that we got a message saying we should upgrade our servers to Scale Gen 2. But when I checked, my server was already running on Intel Xeon Gold CPUs. So I figured this upgrade and the upcoming E5 phase-out wouldn’t apply to me — or at least not so soon. I thought the upgrade I paid for would last for a while.

    But after I opened a ticket just to ask about it, my CPU upgrade was suddenly canceled, the $6 refunded, and my server downgraded.
    That was honestly disappointing.

    It felt like the upgrade I paid for was just thrown out, mainly to push people into more expensive plans. And it makes me wonder — if that can happen, what’s stopping the same thing from happening to one of your current flash deals or promos later?

    I’m not saying cheap promos should last forever. But when someone pays for a feature or upgrade, I think it’s fair to expect it to stay valid for a reasonable amount of time.

    Let’s say there are two possible scenarios here, even if the outcome looks the same in the end:
    a. Started on E5-V4 → paid to upgrade to Gen 1 → later got a free upgrade to Gen 2 during maintenance → now E5-V4 is being phased out → refund issued → CPU upgrade canceled → downgraded back to E5-V4.
    b. Started on E5-V4 → paid to upgrade to Gen 1 → later Gen 1 was removed due to issues → refund issued → downgraded back to E5-V4 → now E5-V4 is also being phased out.

    Both lead to the same place, sure — but in case (a), it really feels like the old upgrade was canceled just to push people into more expensive plans.
    After the maintenance upgrade to Gen 2, most of us thought it was a nice, generous gesture — and even helped promote how great it was.
    So it was really disappointing to later be told that it was only temporary all along.

    Thanked by 1host_c
  • @host_c said:
    Other type of services on E5-V4 will be ended even this year, but more on that later.

    My vps is already upgraded to Xeon Gold 6240 but I still get an email saying that my services on E5-v4 will be discontinued and I have to upgrade to a Xeon Scalable, even though it's not on an E5-v4.

    In a nutshell, I think you're just making all this up as you go along. It would be better to just increase prices flat out instead of going through the upgrade shenanigans.

    Thanked by 1NJa64F
  • VoidVoid Member

    @artxs said:

    @host_c said:
    Other type of services on E5-V4 will be ended even this year, but more on that later.

    My vps is already upgraded to Xeon Gold 6240 but I still get an email saying that my services on E5-v4 will be discontinued and I have to upgrade to a Xeon Scalable, even though it's not on an E5-v4.

    In a nutshell, I think you're just making all this up as you go along. It would be better to just increase prices flat out instead of going through the upgrade shenanigans.

    Same here. I think they’ll downgrade to E5 eventually and then discontinue. Mine is also Xeon Gold 6248. Most likely a case of their automation failing to create the server in the correct node as explained by them before because I never paid the $6 for an upgrade.

    Thanked by 1host_c
  • @Void said:
    Most likely a case of their automation failing to create the server in the correct node as explained by them before because I never paid the $6 for an upgrade.

    My vps was upgraded probably a few months after it was created, and I specifically created a ticket to downgrade the vps back to an E5 because the upgrade was supposed to be voluntary and I never approved the upgrade but they did it anyway.

    In any case, forced upgrade is why I abandoned Apple with their money-grabbing bullshit and this is just another example of that business model. I'll wait for Host-D because I'm done with Host-C.

  • @Cybr said:

    @Detruire said:

    @host_c said: I am starting to regret extending this to 2027 for the 5TB and 10TB deals. Should have sent out a notification with a 90 day time-frame to choose what to do and be gone with it, rather then giving ~1.5 years to choose what to do, this will not happen again.

    Yeah, the upgrade path isn't very appealing if you're just idling using your VM for cold storage, and don't need the extra RAM, boot disk, or CPU.

    I'm seriously disappointed in Host-C for rewarding early adopters with price increases, especially considering new gen hardware is faster and more power efficient, reducing running costs.

    The whole reason I got a pioneer deal, even though that meant paying a premium while the server is left idle for the first 1-2 years (it's been idle for 16 months so far), was so that I would have a long-term backup server at a price point that I can comfortably keep forever (as long as Host-C exists) without worrying about budgeting for it no matter what happens in the future.

    If I knew there would be price increases, I wouldn't have taken the deal 16 months ago, since I've now paid a $90 premium for nothing. Keeping it long-term no longer makes sense, since it'll be far less appealing after the increase and I have to assume it'll increase again at some point in the future.

    I've got lifetime deals for backup storage with a few different companies now, which means even if I get hit by a car and am in a coma for years, renewal will not fail and my data will be retained.

    You paid for holding that space. You didn't do anything with that, that's your problem.

    If I am renting something, whether I use it or not, I will have to pay.

    It is as simple as that.

    Thanked by 1host_c
  • CybrCybr Member

    @itachikonoha said:

    @Cybr said:

    @Detruire said:

    @host_c said: I am starting to regret extending this to 2027 for the 5TB and 10TB deals. Should have sent out a notification with a 90 day time-frame to choose what to do and be gone with it, rather then giving ~1.5 years to choose what to do, this will not happen again.

    Yeah, the upgrade path isn't very appealing if you're just idling using your VM for cold storage, and don't need the extra RAM, boot disk, or CPU.

    I'm seriously disappointed in Host-C for rewarding early adopters with price increases, especially considering new gen hardware is faster and more power efficient, reducing running costs.

    The whole reason I got a pioneer deal, even though that meant paying a premium while the server is left idle for the first 1-2 years (it's been idle for 16 months so far), was so that I would have a long-term backup server at a price point that I can comfortably keep forever (as long as Host-C exists) without worrying about budgeting for it no matter what happens in the future.

    If I knew there would be price increases, I wouldn't have taken the deal 16 months ago, since I've now paid a $90 premium for nothing. Keeping it long-term no longer makes sense, since it'll be far less appealing after the increase and I have to assume it'll increase again at some point in the future.

    I've got lifetime deals for backup storage with a few different companies now, which means even if I get hit by a car and am in a coma for years, renewal will not fail and my data will be retained.

    You paid for holding that space. You didn't do anything with that, that's your problem.

    If I am renting something, whether I use it or not, I will have to pay.

    It is as simple as that.

    Yes, I thought I made it clear that I specifically paid for holding it at the early adopter price, not expecting a random price increase for the existing service.

    I've done the same thing countless times with dozens of different providers, taking advantage of rare launch/BF deals, and have no problem paying for an idling service until I am ready to start using it.

    The gamble is usually whether the provider will continue to exist long term and not deadpool after a while, but this is the first time I've had one decide to increase the price of a recurring discount given to early adopters.

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