Explanation

Why our prices can only go down

What others do at the end, we do at the beginning.

The question

Most platforms follow the same pattern. At first, the service is remarkable — almost too good to be true. Features are generous, prices are low, sometimes the service is even free. This is intentional: billions are spent to attract you, so that you build your profile, grow your network, spend your time there.

Then, once you're in — once your data, your contacts, your habits are all inside the system — the equation shifts. Prices rise. Features disappear behind subscriptions. Ads multiply. What once felt like a gift becomes a toll road.

This is not an accident. It's the model.

Here's why
The explanation

We do the opposite.

We launch at prices above what we intend to charge in the long run. As the service grows and matures, prices go down — not up. And that commitment isn't just a promise: it's written into our contracts.

Even better: if you pay for a service today and the price drops tomorrow, the difference comes back to you, retroactively.

Nobody else does this. We know. And we're doing it anyway.

The reason we can: we're not trying to hook you in order to extract from you later. We're building something meant to last — and the only way that works is if you trust us. This is how we earn it.

Your turn