this post was submitted on 07 Feb 2025
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There's an article going around but it's mostly useless because it's insufficiently naming specific examples.

YouTube = unskipable ads YouTube = ads longer than the content YouTube = ads during pause YouTube = constantly decreasing revenue share with creators despite more ads

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[โ€“] concrete_baby@sh.itjust.works 17 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (5 children)
  • Google Image Search removing the ability to go directly to the raw image after Getty complained that web users are bypassing its website and therefore not generating traffic
  • Facebook removing chronological feed
  • Facebook showing you pages that you never followed on your home feed without the ability to turn this off
  • Microsoft trying to introduce ads to Explorer and the start menu
  • Microsoft making it difficult to create a local Windows account by making the process unintuitive, leading the user to believe that a Microsoft account is needed to use Windows
  • Apple dropping support for iOS web apps because it doesn't want to support browsers other than Safari
  • Reddit and Twitter's ban of third-party API use that killed nearly all third-party clients
  • EA producing games that require users to be always online, despite the game being single-player, presumably as a DRM measure
  • Ad companies making it easy for you to give consent to data sharing and selling but really difficult for you to opt-out

Edit: More examples

[โ€“] Phoenixz1@lemmy.world 9 points 5 days ago
  • Google Chrome phasing out ad-blocker support (Manifest V2) under the guise of "improving security," forcing users to endure more ads.
  • YouTube removing the "Dislike" count on videos, reducing transparency about content quality and user sentiment.
  • Google Search prioritizing SEO-spam sites and paid ads over relevant organic results, making it harder to find genuine information.
  • HP and Epson using DRM in printers to block third-party ink cartridges, forcing users to buy overpriced proprietary ink.
  • Instagram deprioritizing photo posts in favor of Reels, flooding feeds with algorithmically pushed content instead of updates from followed accounts.
  • LinkedIn enabling spammy "growth hacks" (e.g., vague AI-generated posts, connection request floods) that clutter users' feeds and messages.
  • Nintendo shutting down online servers for older consoles (e.g., Wii U, 3DS), rendering purchased games partially or fully unusable.
  • Netflix aggressively cracking down on password sharing while raising subscription prices, forcing users to pay extra for previously permitted account sharing.
  • Adobe eliminating one-time purchases for Creative Cloud software, locking users into costly subscriptions indefinitely.
  • Apple throttling performance of older iPhones via iOS updates (initially without transparency), seen as coercing upgrades.
  • Apple removing the headphone jack from iPhones, pushing users to buy expensive AirPods or dongles.
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