@CritterFritter I don’t like how it’s disclosed, but it’s somewhere deep in the github docs this information. Which I don’t think is good it should be very easy to find on their site somewhere else, only nerds end up on GitHub docs.
Recently they turned on data sampling so carriers get to use new hotspots for two weeks for free to see if it’s in a good location. I do see a bunch of people complaining about that.
In a recent mobile working group call they mentioned lowering the 50 cents a GB because it’s too high and not sustainable so more shots are going to be fired soon. Wonder how the community will react.
good lord Helium. wtf over? my first day i set up at the nail shop and i got almost 29of rewarded data…. that was about it. i just checked it last couple days and its at almost 30gb of UNREWARDED data.
i thought it was for network to test your reliability what ever. but apparently not. apparently there’s just some maxed i it user within range of my hotspot draining way my shops allotted limit. (prob some crack head living in thr alley but i doubt it. they usually aren’t here during winter months)
but anyways to maybe help some people out there who can’t empathize or sympathize cause they just can’t relate. prob the closest scenario thy most these degenerates would know is is probably as such.. helium is like an STD. bad news that never goes away. friends don’t let friends get helium. stay away from the heli-eewie-



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Helium fails to disclose you only get 5Gb per subscriber, the carriers dictate what’s paid for and what’s free, and Helium is failing to maintain the $.50/gb subsidized cost.
We need to get rid of Helium before it makes a bad name for DEPIN