Quote:
Originally Posted by xkingthugx
The big point here was lifetime. You pay for lifetime, and you expect lifetime updates. When you pay for software such as anti-virus or programs, you get the updates if it's a one time buy, or yearly. Software still updates for valued customers. You can't just ignore your own customers, they're what created the foundation.
What you're doing is using the injector updating some features and naming it a vip injector with a new price. So since your old injector is leaked, the people who paid for it suffer, and don't get your "new" injector updates. All these people that say it works and blah blah, what happens when battleeye updates, is he going to create another injector?
This is a risky business model, and it seems to be going into a ditch. From the moment you introduced your new injector you removed the purchases of the old, and you're lifetime customers aren't linked to the new injector. So you released a Slim injector, sold it for more and cut production to your old one. I'm pretty sure this is going to end bad for everyone who bought lifetime.
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If I had the ability to give back customers a lifetime key to the new injector I would, but you see, there wasn't a server logging everything back then. But now there is. The old injector got leaked here and there, so not only that, but the customers became too many (cannot send and compile an individual EXE on each update for each person)
I don't mind giving a refund for the people who bought the old injector in the past 24 hours, but I refused to sell anybody in the past 2-3 days because I was working on the new version, I could have sold them the old and then tell them about a new one, but no I'm not like that.
You guys clearly misunderstood my procedures, lots of factors obligating me to do so. If you think the price is so high I think I can lower it down, but again, more expensive -> less buyers -> less copies -> less detection rate.