So I'm going a bit off brand and talking about something that really doesn't affect me at all. I was taking out the recycling the other night and saw some spam mail from S1r1usXM. I never had it, but a few relatives did. That got me looking around for anyone else who had to deal with it and made me wonder if anyone actually thought radio was worth an infinite subscription fee. I saw rates as outrageous as $22 a month. It's audio you listen to in your car. I'd say the average US resident spends less than 2 hours in a car per day (probably far less). I've never heard of that radio service in anything other than vehicles. Before 2000, I don't think anyone had even heard of XM. As an anti-capitalist, I just cannot fathom any aural subscription service being worth more than $2 a month, especially when so, so many free alternatives exist. To see just how much this radio service is worth, they usually will haggle down to $5/mo if you really, really try to cancel. Yet this company advertises and sells the $22/mo model. It's despicable, especially for something as redundant and, IMO, worthless as satellite radio. This junk has cost the one-time price of a crystal radio for well over a century. Now you want to say that your "shows" that people might listen to intently for maybe an hour or two a day are going to be worth nearly a dollar a day? I saw reviews of some really scummy practices like not being able to cancel online and having to go through multiple people just to get the service canceled and I can't help but feel sorry for the poor fools that pay for it with not only money but precious time, as well. On a larger note, I'm saddened by the rise of SaaS and other subscription models for products that should be one-time purchases, if purchases at all. At least with A-to-Z, they include a bundle of mailing, video, audio, and storage (though not storage for long) for your subscription fee. The specialist companies that give you one single thing for a large price just seems insane to me. I guess I've been programmed by my parents to resist spending money where it's not needed, but I absolutely hate that so many companies are doing it. It's really sad, especially when capitalism is being corrupted like it is and leading to big businesses buying out the little guys. It would be fine if these big businesses had any sort of morality. I guess I agree with some parts of capitalism, but honestly the way it's implemented now with no healthy competition, oligopolies, coordinated anti-consumerism, I just can't support it any longer.