![]() They changed the wording to "minimum monthly guarantee plus an affiliate commission once the guarantee is met." The hosting companies must still be making a lot of money, let's get even more from them. So we're talking $100,000/year commitment roughly. They've removed that pricing information though and one can only assume raised prices since 2013 (we saw PaaS jump from $100 to $500/month). ![]() $7,000/month for the top spot and you must sponsor events. If you go further back you can even see shared hosting prices. The only reason they have such a stupid disclaimer is because if you click that advertising policy you find out those spots are sold to the highest bidder and based on nothing but how much a company is paying.Īt least in the past they were upfront about how much they cost. These companies are great choices but you don't endorse them? That seems like a nonsense disclaimer. Let's take a look at Drupal's hosting recommendations page: They get tricked into using sub-par services that authorities are recommending. It's this pervasive semi-secret that everyone seems to have accepted, but it screws over countless people who aren't in on the secret. TechCrunch even wrote web hosting reviews are a cesspool when they covered this site. ![]() It's been known in the industry and by tech savvy users since forever. They are always bullshit (at least that should be your attitude until proven otherwise*).įirst off, I'm not the first person to know or say this.
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