With news of Unroll.me selling user inbox info to Uber, lots of people are repeating "if you're not paying for it, you're the product."

I've said before, and will continue to say, that that is the wrong formulation. Sometimes you pay for it and you're still the product – look at US ISPs. Sometimes you don't pay for it and you're not the product – free software.

The real question is whether a software or service empowers users, which can't be boiled down to whether you paid.

@xor Maybe we should recontextualize paying for it. FOSS still requires a payment, either in giving up the shiny hotness that comes from the big services or the actual development resources of maintaining the projects/services.

As they say "If you can't find the sucker at the table..."

It's me. I'm the sucker. :<