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Android Google Businesses Software The Almighty Buck

Google Is Testing a $4.99 App Subscription Bundle (variety.com) 49

Google has been testing a new app subscription bundle that gives users access to premium apps for one monthly price. From a report: Google Play Pass, as the subscription offering is being called, promises users "all play, no interruptions," according to a promotional graphic unearthed by Android Police. A Google spokesperson confirmed that the company is currently testing the subscription, but declined to comment further. Google Play Pass, at is it being tested right now, costs $4.99 per month, and promises access to "hundreds of premium apps and games without ads, download fees or in-app purchases."
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Google Is Testing a $4.99 App Subscription Bundle

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    With this being Google, it'll be Beta and then they'll yank it when you least expect it.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday August 01, 2019 @01:10PM (#59023988)

    How much would any one app in the bundle get in terms of compensation if you used it as part of this bundle? Never mind selling an app for $1, how about $0.01...

    Will be interesting to see what kinds of apps they have on board and who has chosen to join in. Seems like it would be mostly garbage apps.

    • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Thursday August 01, 2019 @02:08PM (#59024236)

      How much would any one app in the bundle get in terms of compensation if you used it as part of this bundle? Never mind selling an app for $1, how about $0.01...

      Will be interesting to see what kinds of apps they have on board and who has chosen to join in. Seems like it would be mostly garbage apps.

      I wouldn't mind getting $0.01 from 100 million people.

    • How much would any one app in the bundle get in terms of compensation if you used it as part of this bundle? Never mind selling an app for $1, how about $0.01...

      Per user, per month?

      That could add up quickly.

  • When previously free, privacy-monetizing software now will cost $4.99/month.
  • Why settle for 4.99 when you can entice a 99.99 purchase of gold coins instead. We seen the whole paying for no ads model before in multiple industries where they eventually get you to pay for ads.
  • So we're going with renting apps now instead of purchasing them? If I drop out of the subscription, do I also loose the apps I "paid for" in the previous month(s) rental fee?

    Sorry Google, no thank you. I'm fucked enough with monthly subscriptions as it is, I don't need another.

    • Smells like "Game Pass" or "PS Now" Keep paying, and we'll let you "rent" games. Or specifically "this game is free without ads until you cancel your service"....

      At some point all these subscriptions will have to hit a critical mass and fall out to a few prominent ones... it's getting ridiculous with streaming and whatnot...

    • by dysmal ( 3361085 )

      If you drop your subscription, do those apps lose access to the data they slurped from you?

    • by asylumx ( 881307 )

      do I also loose the apps I "paid for"

      Well, you certainly don't tighten them.

  • by Chromal ( 56550 ) on Thursday August 01, 2019 @02:02PM (#59024216)
    Do you get to keep the apps if you end the subscription (or indeed the subscription service itself ceases to operate in the future?) I think we know how this goes, if you participate, you're spending $60 a year on a rug that will one day be pulled out from under you.
    • Do you get to keep the apps if you end the subscription (or indeed the subscription service itself ceases to operate in the future?) I think we know how this goes, if you participate, you're spending $60 a year on a rug that will one day be pulled out from under you.

      When your physical rug has been used so much it has dog pee stains on it and holes worn into it from walking on it you don't get any money back when you throw it out.

      For me, I spend less than $60 a year on buying apps, so it's a big NO from me. However, if you're someone who regulary buys premium apps and games and they appear on the list for "free", then it might make sense even if you don't keep them if you cancel your subscription.

      If you're buying $60 worth of apps in a year there's a good chance a lot

  • No. Just No.

    I've pulled away from dependence on Microsoft, and have been pulling away from dependence on Apple and Google lately, too. I'm done with these companies taking what would otherwise be great software, polluting it with unwanted feature "enhancements", privacy invasion, spyware/telemetry, and - once we become dependent on it - a sudden removal of "free" and a pricetag or rental fee.
     
    FU Google.

  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Thursday August 01, 2019 @02:37PM (#59024392)

    would be a pay to remove apps especially the ones that come with the phone, and can't be deleted.

    Or how about a security service that actually monitored your data leaking out of every "free" app, and then could automatically block it from talking to all of the AWS or BookFace data collection servers. Or could block the installation of "evil" apps (both from the play store and 3rd party installs)

    I do have a firewall service installed.

    I don't think I've ever bought an app, or book, or movie, or magazine from the play store, I have been using android phones since they first became available (TMO G1)

    • by thomst ( 1640045 )

      bobstreo confessed:

      I don't think I've ever bought an app, or book, or movie, or magazine from the play store, I have been using android phones since they first became available (TMO G1)

      I've bought exactly two: Monument Valley and BusyBox Pro.

      Both were purchased on the Play Store Family Plan, so both my wife and I installed them for the single-user cost.

      BusyBox Pro is well worth the price, and Monument Valley is entertaining enough that I didn't mind paying for it - and it was on sale when I bought it, so ... profit!

      • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
        I've purchased ES File Explorer & FB reader, both are worth supporting. ES file explorer is the only good app I can find that supports smb, cifs, sftp, & local file access.
        • I used to use and recommend ES File Explorer. I stopped when they introduced full-screen ads (in the free version) which pop up on their own outside the app. Which led to support calls from others wondering what is this rogue app that is suddenly taking over their phone.

          I know the paid version probably doesn't have these ads. It doesn't matter. I can't trust an app developer who would pull obnoxious stunts like that, especially for something like a root-capable file manager that by its nature requires fairl

  • If Google credited me $5 that I could use in their app store, I don't know what I would buy with it. The days of being excited for apps are long gone for me.

    I have a core set that I've settled on and am not really interested in trying every new thing anymore.

  • Do they then guarantee that none of my data will be collected or used as part of their telemetry?

  • Similar to YouTube Red/Premium. You get no ads and a few extras in exchange for your money.

    I consider it a good thing. That's another alternative to ads.

  • With this kind of crap environment I'd rather aim for a skilled blue-collar job than IT sometimes. Is anyone making money off these games anyway? As far as I can tell, each Western-produced game has 100 rubbish clones.
    • Those who do IT generally don't do "software development" daily, but instead write or tweak a sysadmin-type script occasionally. As for true software development, there's plenty more than just game development. In the 35 years or so I've been doing software development, I've never done game development.
      • IT people are the custodians of computers. The data janitors. They are a far cry from being 'developers.' There has always been a big need for computer operators, the title to describe the job has just changed over time.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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