AustinTX
Registered Member
... Subscriptions are the future for a lot of companies, and it makes sense for them because it locks in a stable cashflow that can be projected, plus small tickets (paper cuts that bleed you to death) are easier for people to digest. Even Adobe moved to a subscription model..
You are right, subscriptions are good for companies - they are often a lousy deal for consumers. I hate subscriptions with a passion, and I avoid these things like the plague, with a few exceptions where it makes sense to me (cell phone, NetFlix, home Internet) because the value exceeds the cost.
The BlueLink stuff mainly replicates things I already pay for. It's basically like paying for another cell phone service when you already have a cell phone plan. The added benefits of BlueLink don't justify the price in my opinion, and if the car manufacturers truly wanted to add something for their customers, they would use customers existing cell phones instead of adding a completely new service with all the added cost. Someone mentioned Honda's HondaLink - which uses your existing cell phone - service is free, with similar capabilities to BlueLink.
With regards to the "murder and the OnStar button" story, one could say the same about always carrying a defibrillator. There will always be a story or anecdote about how something happened and something somehow saved someone. But unlike an airbag, a seat-belt or other safety equipment I don't think OnStar, BlueLink or other such services are a huge safety benefit. My phone can be set to call an emergency number when touching a button, that seems just as useful as having BlueLink do that for me, especially since most 911 services now have the ability to provide GPS location through E911 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enhanced_9-1-1). I actually assume that OnStar and BlueLink use a system similar to E911, maybe with slightly better accuracy.
Subscriptions are usually like high-interest payment plans - a bad deal for the consumer, with some notable exceptions. The only way companies will stop forcing the subscription model onto their customers is if we as customers refuse to play along.