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hnov | 3 years ago

While that lasts, you can't be charging a flat $200 in a world where the other players are charging 5-10¢/GB of egress.

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NavinF|3 years ago

I said the opposite ("cloud providers can't keep charging 5-10¢/GB egress") a few years ago, but I guess I was wrong. I still think their pricing is absolutely insane in a world where even the smallest companies can colo a server and get wholesale transit that works out to <$0.005/GB.

But I guess nobody's really pushing traffic so nobody cares about $/GB.

yamtaddle|3 years ago

> I still think their pricing is absolutely insane in a world where even the smallest companies can colo a server and get wholesale transit that works out to <$0.005/GB.

Their pricing's insane in a world where you can get prices not too far from that wholesale rate for CDN service (which is a whole different beast from having one or two colo'd servers).

And anyway, nobody pushing serious bits is paying public rates, anywhere. Those discounts can be huge. In fact I wouldn't be surprised if part of the reason cloud providers have such high rates is so they can give their counterparts an easy, very impressive-looking "win" in negotiations.

GordonS|3 years ago

Erm... why not? Everyone knows cloud providers are gouging customers on egress bandwidth fees, it's great that someone bucks the trend and calls them out on it.

dustymcp|3 years ago

Alot of the companies who bought cloudflare would probably rather pay the 200$ than deal with migrating everything.