Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

> If you're selling out make more and/or raise prices.

What if you want to raise prices only to crypto miners, and not raise them for gamers/professions, in order to support your long term customers?

There are lots of very good business reasons to provide preferential treatment to a specific customer base, and to raise prices on a different customer base.

It is called price discrimination, and is very useful.

Do you not support companies making obvious business decisions like this, with their own company, that have large benefits to their existing customer base, as well as being perfectly rational from a business perspective?

Having crypto miners subsidize an existing customer base, makes a lot of business sense, and helps out a lot of people.

And it is all done, with people making voluntary decisions with the products that they choose to sell. Don't buy the product, if you don't like it.



If you want to help long term customers send discounts to people who have bought cards before. You don't need to cripple the devices.

I don't support companies making the choice to limit their compute. I think companies should sell general purpose computers.


> send discounts to people

No, this doesn't solve the problem.

Because what they want to do is ensure that the cards are not resold to miners, and instead stay in the hands of long term customers.

> You don't need to cripple the devices

First of all, they aren't crippled for the existing customers. They are only limited, for this other use case that the company doesn't care about.

And they do need to limit that functionality, if they want to prevent those cards from being resold to crypto miners.

> I don't support companies

Then don't purchase their product, if you don't like it. That is kind of the point of all of this. They don't want you as a customer. And it is their company, that they can do what they want with.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: