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Source:https://github.com/SoraKumo001/next-streaming

⬅️ Amazon Web Services dark patterns (2024)
gregw2 2 daysReload
AWS should provide features where you are prompted to set a hard budget limit when you first signup and services fail once that's exceeded, so you don't get surprised, but they don't. That should be opt-out.

(recent thread on this: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42133700 )

AWS does provide free trial accounts with $25 credits in some of their training environments/partners so there already are /some/ ways to do this.

(AWS does provide a opt-in budgeting feature which can alert you if budgets are exceeded. Not the same!)

While on the subject, AWS should provide an account-level setting/feature such that if there are multiple people/users/IAM logging into a single account, there is a flag so that any resources invoked in the console by a user get auto-tagged with that user's ID/IAM-identity/etc. In a small business with technical users, this would be quite helpful.

I went to give my 10 year old access to my old AWS account to play around and figured I should add some billing guardrails and was saddened to find I could anymore setup Cloudwatch/Budget billing alert guardrails to SMS my phone without paying $X a month for the SMS setup. Email is supported so I suppose I shouldn't complain and I hate SMS spammers so I get it but still another scenario of an unfriendly experience.

-- Someone using AWS the last 11 years, responsible for millions of dollars in enterprise spend on it, and sad to see their customer-centric attitude only goes so deep. I feel it getting weaker over time but there have always been limits to it.


Mo3 2 daysReload
While I absolutely agree on the topic of hand, Aurora isn't necessarily the best example.. for what it offers it's "relatively" cheap.. and please don't mention Hetzner now, we're talking fully managed extremely reliable, redundant and multi-AZ databases

aweiher 19 hoursReload
I once tried OpenSearch serverless, as it is advertised as "you only pay for the resources consumed by the workload".

After one month of not using it I was surprised by a 300+$ bill as there is a minimum of 2 OCU billed. Yes it is explained on the billing page later in more technical terms but was still surprising for me as I have a different understanding of "only pay what was consumed".


apitman 2 daysReload
It feels like basically everything is dark patterns now. Universally hated by users, and yet it must make corps more many otherwise they probably wouldn't do it. I wish there was a way to advertise "we don't do dark patterns" in a way users could connect to all the things they hate about modern transactions.

burnished 2 daysReload
I have had this experience as a student. I'm going through their offerings now to beef up my resume and am a little anxious about getting hands on with their free trials due to the level of knowledge I may already need to have to avoid an expensive mistake.