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Patreon Hits Donors With New Fees, Angering Creators (venturebeat.com)

Patreon's changing their fee structure to make donors cover payment-processing fees (standardized to 2.9%) -- plus an additional 35 cents for every pledge. Long-time Slashdot reader NewtonsLaw reports that Patreon's users are furious: Despite Patreon's hype that this is a good thing for creators, few of these actually seem to agree and there's already a growing backlash on social media... many fear that their net return will be lower because the extra fees levied on patreons are causing them to either reduce the amount they pledge or withdraw completely... For those patrons supporting only a few creators the effect won't be large, but for those who make small donations to many creators this could amount to a hike of almost 40% in the amount charged to their credit cards. Without exception, all the content creators I have spoken to would have:

a) liked to have been consulted first

b) wanted the option to retain the old system where they bear the cost of the fees.

As a content creator, I've already seen quite a few of my patreons reducing their pledge and others canceling their pledges completely -- and I understand why they are doing that.

"Everyone hates Patreon's new fee," writes VentureBeat, adding "Many creators are saying it's unfair for patrons to have to pay transaction fees. In addition to that, most people support multiple creators and not just one, and they'll have to pay the extra fee for each pledge they make."

Tech journalist Bryan Lunduke is already soliciting suggestions on Twitter for an open source or Free Software solution that accepts donations from multiple payment systems, and while the change doesn't go into effect until December 18th, NewtonsLaw writes that "it's starting to look as if many content creators will be getting a slightly larger percentage of a much smaller amount as a result of this lunacy by Patreon -- something that will see them far worse off than the were before."

143 comments

  1. Selfish creators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stupid donors

    1. Re:Selfish creators by VernonNemitz · · Score: 1

      This might be a good time to mention dwolla dot com. A couple years ago they were offering an easy way to do small transactions with no fees at all. They might still be doing it, although they are not now advertising it as obviously as they were back then. So for anyone interested, it could be worth looking into.

  2. Hits small pledges the most by Eric+Sharkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I had been pledging $1/month to several different creators. With the new fee structure, it's better to only fund one creator each month and rotate that creator every month. That's ridiculous.

    I canceled all my pledges this morning in protest.

    1. Re:Hits small pledges the most by BronsCon · · Score: 2

      $1.38 after this goes into effect. A 38% surcharge is just ludicrous.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    2. Re:Hits small pledges the most by OrangeTide · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I do a few $1 pledges as well. And I get a single web comic or a D&D map in exchange, depending on the creator. A whole dollar is a lot to pay for a web comic, but it does help keep it going and reduces the reliance on advertising on the creator's site. And the dungeon maps eventually go on sale at DriveThru RPG for around $1 each, but that site keeps 35%. And yes, that works out that Patreon's new prices is not a better deal than a store front.

      I'll give you a concrete example. Having 444 people contributing a $1 or more per month for what started as a hobby is pretty significant. The real meat and potatoes is when he has enough material to release a new book (electronic and print-on-demand). Having people supporting him along the entire process is helpful and your retort of "big spender here" shows that you aren't really clued into what is going on.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    3. Re:Hits small pledges the most by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      While that is an option, I would prefer everyone just left Patreon and let the company go out of business.

    4. Re:Hits small pledges the most by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      $1.38 after this goes into effect. A 38% surcharge is just ludicrous.

      Yep and if you were donating $1/mo to 20 artists it's now $27.60 once the fees are included.

      I only support one and he's already emailed us all saying that it's absurd, he understands if people cancel their pledges (and many already have) and that he's looking for an alternative platform.

    5. Re: Hits small pledges the most by Kazymyr · · Score: 2

      I support several creators on Patreon. I have 2 categories of pledges: large ranging from $7 to $20 per month, and small of $1 per month, for a total of about $55 per month. Or better said I _had_ 2 categories of pledges. Since receiving the notification I had to drop all of the $1 pledges to keep the balance. It's regrettable but it is what it is.

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    6. Re:Hits small pledges the most by Nemosoft+Unv. · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was contemplating supporting a few YouTubers with just that, 10$ a month or so and split it among the ones I liked. Then I read about the change in policy this week and I was like "Wait, this means I have to pay for *every* creator? Who came up with this nonsense?"

      So that means no Patreon, simple. Sorry Big Clive, 8-Bit Guy and Today I Found Out.

      --
      "Fix it? It has been disintegrated, by definition it cannot be fixed!" - Gru in Despicable Me.
    7. Re:Hits small pledges the most by ruddk · · Score: 1

      And I pay 25% VAT on top of that, so it is expensive to give someone a dollar. :/

    8. Re:Hits small pledges the most by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      $1.73 just to give someone a dollar? Christ. Yeah, this is gonna hurt creators.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    9. Re:Hits small pledges the most by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      And what are you doing to solve the "real" problems of the world? Ever consider that some of the creators losing pledges are using their money to solve those problems? Or that some of the patrons who are now absorbing this fee would have otherwise used that money to solve those problems?

      Of course, you'll shout that they'd do better by visiting parts of the world stricken with all these "real" problems, and you're right. They, of course, need money to get there. So anything that takes more money from them, or puts less money in their hands, goes against their ability to solve those problems, doesn't it?

      That makes this not a first-world problem but an ancillary "real" problem.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    10. Re:Hits small pledges the most by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's even worse than that:

      Pledges aren't aggregated at the end of the month any longer, they'll be billed on the monthly anniversary of the pledge date.

      For ALL pledges under roughly $10 (in countries WITHOUT VAT), the creator takes home a smaller percentage of the overall pledge + fees than they did before.

      Credit-card companies will trigger on fraud for the same amount pulled multiple times in one day and lock the card, so you can't just re-pledge to sync everything on the 1st again like before. And even if you did you'd still pay the fee on each individual pledge.

      For pay-per-post entries, that means every time that creator hits 'post' it'll charge everyone's card. How long until someone hits it half a dozen times by accident and their patrons all get their cards locked?

      - WolfWings, still too lazy to login to /., but this is too damn important.

    11. Re:Hits small pledges the most by ruddk · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm down to supporting only 3 channels, Today I found out, Periodic Videos and Taofledermaus. I'll keep supporting them on Patreon until an alternative comes up but there is no way I will be supporting more channels via Patreon with this money grab. :(

    12. Re: Hits small pledges the most by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      +1 to Taofladermaus, I'll have to check out the other two.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    13. Re:Hits small pledges the most by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Hopefully you (and all of the people that replied in agreement with you) let the creators know why you're not now supporting them.

      It's easily inferred that this is the reason, but making it explicit should help.

  3. I would have liked to be asked... by malchus842 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a creator with several hundred patrons and about $1500/month in pledges, I had agreed to the terms where I paid the fees. Nobody asked if I wanted to change the deal I had made. I had no problem paying the fees because it kept things simple for my patrons. It almost feels like "I have altered the deal. Pray I do not alter it further."

    1. Re:I would have liked to be asked... by Solandri · · Score: 1

      I had agreed to the terms where I paid the fees.

      That would be fine for a one-time transaction (e.g. purchasing a car).

      With recurring transactions, there's also a period during which the contract is in effect (e.g. renting an apartment for a year). Once you're beyond that term, what happens next is either defined elsewhere in the contract, or is totally up in the air. Usually it switches to month to month. The two parties continue each month as they were under the original contract. But either party is free to change the terms if they wish (and the other party is free to quit since the contract is no longer in effect).

    2. Re: I would have liked to be asked... by malchus842 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, they are free to change the terms, obviously. I simply wanted to be asked. Mind you, my patrons are not leaving, and I'll come out ahead on this deal, but the original deal was simpler to explain and created less friction. A simple solution would be for Patreon to allow pre-funding your account which would allow for a single fee. It also helps non-USD patrons with exchange fees and other bank fees the incur outside of Patreon's fees.

    3. Re: I would have liked to be asked... by Anubis+IV · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A simple solution would be for Patreon to allow pre-funding your account which would allow for a single fee.

      Exactly. There’s no reason Patreon can’t batch the payments together to reduce processing fees for everyone involved. Moreover, the incentives are misaligned in this new system.

      When I buy stuff from Apple, I generally don’t see the charge show up on my card for 2-3 days. If I end up buying multiple apps in that time, they batch them together in the same transaction, saving them those processing fees. And that works out well for them, since those transaction fees come from their slice of the pie.

      Patreon should be doing something similar, either by allowing people to prepay, allowing people to be charged once per month for whatever has happened that month, or allowing people to be charged as things occur, but then batching them like Apple. Even if Patreon did the same but then passed those fees onto content creators instead of taking it from their own slice, it’d still be an improvement over what they had (since creators would effectively be splitting the fees, rather than paying them by themselves) and what they’re doing now (which seems designed to give credit card companies as much money as possible).

    4. Re: I would have liked to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I saw one analysis that Patreon may have wanted to abandon pledge aggregation to avoid gov't regulation of financial services firms. Either that or they're just plain stupid since pledge aggregation was their key feature.

  4. Just like uber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This sort of thing was bound to happen. It is similar to Uber. Remember when you could make money riding for Uber and pay cheaper fares on Uber compared to taxis? Well now it’s difficult to make the same money in Uber, the fares have gone up and now Uber suggests that you tip the driver just as if you were in a taxi. That’s how these companies grow, they offer cheap services and then jack up the price after they established themselves. It’s business development 1-0-1.

  5. Wealth extraction by payment processors must stop by John.Banister · · Score: 1

    If if the only way we can get away from these life sucking vampires is to quit using their currency, then so be it. They aren't providing value commensurate to the fee. It has to stop.

  6. Seems like a cash grab by alvinrod · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This just seems like a cash grab on the part of Patreon. There's no reason that they couldn't combine all of the pledges into a single transaction with respect to billing the customer and then split the fee equally across all transactions. So if someone is pledging $1 to 10 different individuals,

    1. Re:Seems like a cash grab by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's how the pledges are processed already. Patreon bundles up a bunch of $1 pledges and does them all at once, to keep fees down.

      This is purely a cash grab on the backs of users.

    2. Re:Seems like a cash grab by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, this isn't a cash grab at all. Patreon still gets 5% per donation. Most business roll transaction fees into the price of their products or services. This is what Patreon did before the change. Now, the transaction fees are in addition to the donation. The end result is the creators get more money in exchange for the donors paying more.

    3. Re:Seems like a cash grab by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is what Patreon did before the change.

      You are mistaken.

      Before the change, patreon *already* submitted a single transaction to charge me as a donor and so patreon only pays ONE transaction fee.

      After the change, patreon will continue to submit a single transaction and thus continue to be charged one transaction fee. However I support 12 creators, and they will be charging ME 12 transaction fees.
      1 of those 12 makes sense, as that is what they have to pay. The other 11 however are not actual transaction fees, they are patreon added fees, that I have to pay and patreon keeps for themselves.

    4. Re:Seems like a cash grab by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      no, they clarified that they will no longer bundle transactions and will instead make a seperate charge for each pledge

      it appears that in fact they had already decided to make that change but realized that creators would flip when they started paying the additional transaction fees; their research suggested that patrons are less sensitive to such changes and so shifted the fees to them.

      so they were not actively malicious just totally incompetent.

  7. Drop the fuckers by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 0

    Drop Patreon and setup Dogecoin and Reddcoin wallets. It's free for you and the cost per transaction is only ONE COIN.

    Seems high? It takes a few Dogecoins or Reddcoins to make ONE CENT. That's extremely cheap transaction fees.

    Problem solved.

    --
    #DeleteFacebook
    1. Re: Drop the fuckers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the fuck am I supposed to do with the received 'coins'? I can't directly use them at McDonald's or any other legitimate business. Maybe I can deal with some sketchy 'exchange', but they could very well be scams and I end up with nothing in return. The best I could hope to do would be to 'donate' them off to some sorry fool who will maybe like me slightly more, at least until he realizes how fucking useless these 'coins' I gave him are and then starts to resent me for giving him garbage.

    2. Re:Drop the fuckers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes drop receiving real money and instead take in play money.

    3. Re:Drop the fuckers by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Monopoly money also has very low transaction costs of zero monopoly dollars. Additionally one monopoly dollar is worth zero actual dollars.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    4. Re: Drop the fuckers by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      You also can't trade Apple shares or gold bars at McDonald's, doesn't mean they're worthless.

      There's so many anti-crypto-currencies morons on Slashdot, it's hard to believe this used to be a place for nerds.

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
    5. Re:Drop the fuckers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you really believe Dogecoins are worthless, send five million of them to D9scjyKETYZesSmhjCR4vye4bc6iDqXPd6.

    6. Re: Drop the fuckers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the real nerds moved to reddit, /.is just old Luddite farts at this point.

      I'm only here to mock them.

    7. Re: Drop the fuckers by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Reddit has horrifically censored conversations, I can't trust the discourse there. It's useful for (e.g.) looking up computer game hints (via a Google search) but just doesn't support the open discussions we get here.

    8. Re: Drop the fuckers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Its a good thing you don't get to define for anyone but yourself what is
      a. valuable
      b. a moron

      There's so many crypto-currency morons on Slashdot, it's hard to believe this used to be a place for nerds.

    9. Re:Drop the fuckers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ok, you give me 6 million of them, and I'll send 5 million to D9scjyKETYZesSmhjCR4vye4bc6iDqXPd6.
      because like most people with an IQ > shoe size, I have exactly 0 Dog-e-Coins

  8. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Dwedit · · Score: 1

    Yeah, quit using currency with a %2 transaction fee and switch to Bitcoin with a flat $20 transaction fee.

  9. Isn't this better? by Solandri · · Score: 1

    "Many creators are saying it's unfair for patrons to have to pay transaction fees. In addition to that, most people support multiple creators and not just one, and they'll have to pay the extra fee for each pledge they make."

    On the contrary, the patrons were already paying the transaction fees before. They'd send donations to the creator, and the creator would use some of those donations to pay the transaction fees.

    The only thing that's changed is that the patrons now know how much of their donation is going to transaction fees. This knowledge can be used to eliminate inefficient donations in favor of more efficient donations which incur smaller fees. e.g. the other commenter who paid $1/mo to a bunch of creators.

    • At 2.9% and 35 cents per transaction, that meant each creator was only getting 62.1 cents per dollar donated.
    • If he instead switches to $10/mo rotated between 10 different creators each month, then that results in a transaction fee of 29 cents + 35 cents, or each creator receiving $9.36 of the $10, or 93.6 cents per dollar donated.

    I suppose some creators might be upset at donations becoming less uniform, coming in large bursts instead of small steady amounts. But at the end of the year they'll have gotten to keep more money. Unless this change somehow alters donors behavior and they end up donating less overall.

    1. Re:Isn't this better? by mark-t · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that the *donor* would be charged this additional fee, over and above whatever their pledge amount was.

    2. Re:Isn't this better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You have no idea what you are talking about. The monthly donations are batched into a lump sum transaction, so the fee per pledge did not exist. Out of a $1 pledge, $0.05 was a Patreon fee and a variable amount up to $0.10 maximum was the "transaction fee." Now for a "$1 donation" the charge to the donor is actually $1.38, so the initial amount has changed significantly and it is not really $1 we're dealing with. Out of this $1.38, $0.95 goes to the creator, $0.05 is the Patreon fee, and the remaining $0.38 is the "transaction fee" which Patreon largely pockets since they STILL batch all donations by a person into one lump sum withdrawal. That's a 280% increase in the transaction fee. Once donation amounts are normalized to only charge the donor $1 total for a "$1 pledge" the creator takes home $0.62 instead of $0.85. For what's now being called a "$1 pledge" Patreon is now taking a 31% cut of what the donor gives instead of a 15% maximum. Of course, if you donate $40 a month to one person this percentage goes down relative to 40x $1 donations, so it pressures people to dump most of their recipients in favor of giving all the money to very few. Many are just bailing completely in protest.

      It's a money grab for Patreon. I suspect it's a golden parachute deployment tactic by the executives because there's no other logical explanation for this; they knew the backlash would happen.

      You should take the time to understand what you're commenting on before you put fingers to keyboard. I have nothing against you but you spouted a bunch of false numbers as facts. The information is very easy to get so there isn't an excuse.

    3. Re:Isn't this better? by Desler · · Score: 1

      That is true. It’s tacked on to the amount not taken from the pledge.

    4. Re:Isn't this better? by mark-t · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Imagine what would happen to a tip jar at a restaurant if donors weren't allowed to put anything into it without paying an additional fee to an administrator who managed the jar.

    5. Re:Isn't this better? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      That's how it works at Porter's, my exclusive steak restaurant. Also the 'steak' is actually made from incorrigible employees.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    6. Re:Isn't this better? by Desler · · Score: 1

      Not much considering how cheap most customers are already.

    7. Re:Isn't this better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh the naivety of youth...

    8. Re:Isn't this better? by nnet · · Score: 1

      Check labor laws, I'm pretty sure you can't serve employee without gravy...

    9. Re:Isn't this better? by Dahan · · Score: 1

      Out of this $1.38, $0.95 goes to the creator, $0.05 is the Patreon fee, and the remaining $0.38 is the "transaction fee" which Patreon largely pockets since they STILL batch all donations by a person into one lump sum withdrawal.

      They currently batch all donations into one monthly credit card charge, but this whole discussion is about how they're changing things, not what they currently do. And they will be changing to charge each pledge separately. E.g., if you donate $1 each to 10 creators, your card currently gets charged $10 one time. But after Patreon's change, your card will be charged $1 ten times.

  10. De-aggregation of pledges; 3 suggested fixes by tepples · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm not a patron or creator on Patreon, but here's what I've been able to piece together from recent news:

    The credit card processors charge a swipe fee on the order of 30 cents per transaction in addition to a rake of 2 to 3 percent of the value. For debit cards processed through card-present EFTPOS, only the swipe fee applies, which is part of why stores default to "debit" instead of "credit". But in either case, the swipe fee is why many convenience stores have a minimum charge for small purchases, and Amazon charges sellers a minimum commission of $1 per item.

    The use of "de-aggregate" in this Tweet implies that Patreon used to aggregate pledges from multiple donors when charging patrons' credit cards. But there were reportedly a couple abuses of this. One involved people who would pledge to a particular creator, view the creator's patron-only posts, and cancel the pledge the user's before billing date. Another is that a chargeback by a cardmember who doesn't remember his pledges would affect all pledges. So instead, Patreon switched to separately on behalf of each creator.

    I can think of a few ways that Patreon could reduce the impact of a swipe fee on $1 and $2 pledges.

    Annual billing Let the user pay 12 months of a pledge in advance with one transaction. Print magazines, for instance, have used this for decades. "Reset my billing date" button Reintroduce aggregation as an opt-in choice, where patron-only posts remain locked until a patron submits a form that charges a pro-rated fraction of the existing pledges. Gift cards Let a patron top-up Patreon credit. Prepaid mobile phone providers use this.
    1. Re:De-aggregation of pledges; 3 suggested fixes by shess · · Score: 2

      But there were reportedly a couple abuses of this. One involved people who would pledge to a particular creator, view the creator's patron-only posts, and cancel the pledge the user's before billing date. Another is that a chargeback by a cardmember who doesn't remember his pledges would affect all pledges. So instead, Patreon switched to separately on behalf of each creator.

      Like, someone does this ... once? Because if they do it routinely, presumably to access the same content, wouldn't it be easier to just terminate their account, rather than restructure your entire fee system?

      Also, I don't fully understand the chargeback point. AFAICT, I only can chargeback my entire monthly aggregate pledge amount, not a portion of it. Patreon may have a policy of honoring such things at their level, but I'm not sure why that would need to involve the credit-card chargeback system at all. Just as returning an item at a retail store isn't considered a chargeback.

    2. Re:De-aggregation of pledges; 3 suggested fixes by tepples · · Score: 1

      Like, someone does this ... once? Because if they do it routinely, presumably to access the same content, wouldn't it be easier to just terminate their account, rather than restructure your entire fee system?

      The claim, as I understand it, is that a substantial fraction of the user base has done this once.

    3. Re:De-aggregation of pledges; 3 suggested fixes by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

      Like, someone does this ... once? Because if they do it routinely, presumably to access the same content, wouldn't it be easier to just terminate their account, rather than restructure your entire fee system?

      The claim, as I understand it, is that a substantial fraction of the user base has done this once.

      Then they shouldn't be whining.

    4. Re:De-aggregation of pledges; 3 suggested fixes by Desler · · Score: 1

      When has that ever stopped people from whining?

  11. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the fee of a bitcoin transfer is just $10, not $20

  12. Open-source Patreon alternative. by Jack+Zombie · · Score: 2

    Tech journalist Bryan Lunduke is already soliciting suggestions on Twitter for an open source or Free Software solution that accepts donations from multiple payment systems.

    This sounds like a job for GNU Taler.

    https://taler.net/en/index.html

    --
    "You should never doubt what nobody is sure about." -- Willy Wonka
    1. Re:Open-source Patreon alternative. by munch117 · · Score: 1
      I'm pessimistic about Taler. Quoting from taler.net:

      To receive Taler payments, a merchant needs a bank account in the desired currency.

      Ever tried opening a bank account in a foreign currency? Ever tried opening 50 of them for 50 different currencies? It's not impossible in the strictest sense of the word, but if you somehow manage it it's going to cost you a small fortune in fees.

      And that means Taler will only ever be a system for Americans to receive money from other Americans. I don't even believe the French will use it themselves.

    2. Re:Open-source Patreon alternative. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol why does their logo look like nazi insignia?

  13. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to you, payment processors (and financial institutions offering the credit) have to provide their services for free. The money they spend on their operations and covering fraud has to come from some where, therefore what is your proposal?

  14. Re:Crocodile tears ahoy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, it's nice to see there are alternatives to youtube. I'm sure there are alternatives to Patreon also. This shouldn't be an issue, just a minor inconvenience of having to seek out new avenues. Of course now that the ISPs will be prioritizing youtube and netflix, the other avenues will have a tough time getting through. The plan is working like a charm.

  15. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So create your own competing service, or patronize someone else's.

  16. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Desler · · Score: 1

    But that requires work and stuff. Complaining on social media is far easier.

  17. That's not how it worked before by Leuf · · Score: 4, Informative

    If someone was supporting 10 patrons for $1/month each, then Patreon would bill them ONCE for $10 each month and the single transaction fee was split between the 10 creators. The result being each creator would get around 90 cents. This is what made the ecosystem of small donations actually work.

    Now that person is billed 10 times with 10 transaction fees totaling $14 and each creator receives 95 cents.

    Before the creators were getting 90% of the donation. Now they are getting 68%. People are upset because it breaks the system that only existed because of the way the fees were originally structured.

    1. Re:That's not how it worked before by Desler · · Score: 0

      Where are you getting that creators only get 68%? How does 95 cents per dollar equal 68%?

      You seem confused. The service fee is not taken out of the pledge, it’s added on top of the pledge amount.

    2. Re:That's not how it worked before by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Where are you getting that creators only get 68%? How does 95 cents per dollar equal 68%?
      You seem confused. The service fee is not taken out of the pledge

      On one hand, yes you are correct and GP mathed wrong. almost backwards.

      Before if I pledged $1, I paid $1, the creator paid the transaction fee on that. Then patreon took their 5% from the creators total amount that month.

      Now if I pledge $1, I pay $1.44, and then patreon takes their 5% so the creator gets $0.95

      But on the other hand, the creators WILL be making much less.

      For example one creator I pledge a much larger amount to, last month had over 4000 pledges on the $1 tier. As of now that number is just over 900.

      A smaller percentage taken out of $4000 before was a lot more "take home" than a larger percentage taken out of $900.

    3. Re:That's not how it worked before by mjtaylor24601 · · Score: 2

      95 cents per dollar pledged but not per dollar charged to the patron. As you say, the service fee is on top of the pledge amount.

      So a patron makes 10 one dollar pledges. That's

      $10 in pledges + (10 * $0.38 in transaction fees) = $13.80 charged to the patron.

      The creators get $9.50 worth of pledges. $9.50 / $13.80 = 68.88%

      --
      I wish I were as sure of anything as some people are of everything
    4. Re:That's not how it worked before by Leuf · · Score: 1

      You don't get to just pretend the service fee doesn't exist. I'm talking about the percentage of the money the Patron is charged that ends up going to the creator.

    5. Re:That's not how it worked before by Desler · · Score: 1

      Where did I pretend it didn’t exist? Oh right, nowhere did I do that.

    6. Re:That's not how it worked before by Desler · · Score: 1

      Of course it’s only out of what is pledged. Did you think the creator got a cut of the service fee?

    7. Re:That's not how it worked before by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Nonetheless, the maths is simple:

      Before:
      Patron : hands over $10
      Creators : receive 90% of the money
      Patreon : receive 5% of the money

      After
      Patron : hands over $13.80
      Creators : receive 68% of that $13.80
      Patreon : receive.. 3.6%?

      Now assume the patrons can only afford $10.

      Patron : hands over $10
      Minimum per-creator is $1, so some maths needed here.
      10 = x + 0.35x + 0.029x
      (x is $1, 0.35x is the flat fee, 0.029x is the variable fee)
      Nice easy equation, 10 = 1.379x, x = 7.25.
      So the patron can now only fund 7 creators, each of whom can receive 0.95*(((10 - (0.35*7)) / 7) / 1.029)$ = $0.99 each.

      So:
      Creators : 7 get 10% extra, but 3 get 0, zero, nothing, nada, zilch.
      Patreon : get 3.5%

      Except.. Nobody's going to fuck around doing that maths. Except me. And even if they do, they're not going to pledge $1.04 per creator, they're still going to pledge $1.

      So fundamentally, seven out of ten creators get 5% more but three out of ten lose the income entirely.

      Assume that the gains and losses average out over each creator, the final maths is

      Patron : hands over $9.66
      Creators : ten creators get an average of $0.67 each
      Patreon : still picks up their 5% cut

      So creators go from roughly 90c per dollar of pledged money to just 67c - a drop of a quarter of their income from dollar pledges.

      That's their best case scenario. Reality suggests that instead of splitting $10 of pledges amongst seven creators, patrons are just dropping their one dollar pledges. Creator income drops by 100%.

  18. There's always Hatreon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    1. Re:There's always Hatreon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That site is for Nazis.

      Seriously, it's literally a Patreon for hate. If you're not a racist, you won't even consider doing business with them.

  19. Re:Crocodile tears ahoy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's why the Leftards are clamoring for UBI. So many causes to donate to, but they want to do it with other people's money.

  20. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $10 is still about $9.99 too high.

  21. Re:Hilarious! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Conservatives use the shit out of it too. You're dumb.

  22. First content, now money by mordred99 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This seems like Patreon is read to IPO. A few months ago they went after game developers (who use the system and provide monthly updates to patreons) and started objecting to sexual content in the games. Now they are changing the system to start charging more to the patreons, instead of charging more to the people who benefit from the donations. There was a time (I am showing my age) where Paypal did the same thing before it IPOed, by changing the payment method just before it became public so that they could have predictable revenue methods to describe to investors.

    I don't know if it is for the best or now, I just know that people don't like being screwed out of money. In the US, we are conditioned to not know what prices are as everything we buy is the price of an item but tax is figured by the computer at the register. Yes sometimes in some states it is simple math but when you live in a province with tax rates like 9.417% you have no freaking clue what you are going to pay until the cashier tells you. That is exactly what people are pissed off about with this new policy change at Patreon. They knew it was a dollar (or ten) that was spent, now it is some formula that they have to figure out and it is not easy to figure out what is going on. Patreon is not mentioning if you get charged fees multiple times, single transactions, etc.

    1. Re:First content, now money by mordred99 · · Score: 1

      Seems like it is ready to IPO (I couldn't edit it and realized it after I posted).

    2. Re:First content, now money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shooting yourself in both feet with a RPG seems a funny way to get ready for an IPO.

      Not only are patrons cancelling, but I've also seen a creators supporting their decision to cancel and several have either stopping taking Pateron donations or are seriously considering doing so.

      TBH, Patreon have to reverse this otherwise they're leaving themselves open to another startup coming in with the previous pricing model and everyone jumping ship.

    3. Re:First content, now money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IPO, or padding the books to get bought out. Be funny if youtube buys them, since a lot of youtube creators have gone to this platform to make up for the ad revenue losses.

    4. Re:First content, now money by king+neckbeard · · Score: 2

      Shooting yourself in both feet with a RPG seems a funny way to get ready for an IPO.

      This is a change that sounds good to investors and is horrible for actual usage. Sounds like standard operating procedure for getting ready for an IPO.

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    5. Re:First content, now money by DogDude · · Score: 0

      r. Yes sometimes in some states it is simple math but when you live in a province with tax rates like 9.417% you have no freaking clue what you are going to pay until the cashier tells you.

      Jesus Christ kid, take a math class. Move the decimal place over one spot, and there's your tax.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    6. Re:First content, now money by mordred99 · · Score: 1

      While my point was more for hyperbole than factual, I think you either are being obtuse or silly. I know how to estimate, I said to know what the actual answer was. Growing up in Wisconsin, 5% tax rate, I was in third grade and I knew how many weeks I would have to save up for a GI Joe I wanted to buy $3.99 plus $0.20 cents tax, that is five weeks to cover it at a dollar a week. Being a professional with 4 semesters of college calculus behind me, and living in Kirkland, WA, with 9.14% tax, I didn't know without electronic aids that it was $0.273 for tax on my $2.99 Big Mac. If you could do that math in your head - then be grateful you have a wonderful mathematical mind.

    7. Re:First content, now money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes but 9.14% is nearly 9%, so your extra is basically a little over (add a tenth of price then take back a hundredth):

      2.99 is close to 3 so (0.3-0.03) -> 27 cents

      or just stick with 10%, assume you're paying 30 cents and rejoice in your 2 and a bit cent windfall

      how does knowing the exact answer help?

    8. Re:First content, now money by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      province with tax rates like 9.417%

      Hmmm, this item is $19.95. Lets round it up to 20 bux. 9.417 percent tax, well, lets round it up to 10 percent. I'm going to wind up paying slightly less than 22 bux at the cashier.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  23. Welcome to reality by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    My Patreon account usually gets $350-450 per month with like 80 supporters-ish and I've seen zero drop off. People have to learn how payment processing systems work. If you give 3 people $1, it costs a static amount plus a percentage to run your credit card. That's just how it works. Why should Patreon be responsible for eating all the profit and potentially losing money for exceptionally low payment amounts? That doesn't make any sense. You ever try to buy $0.50 collectible cards on ebay for MTG, Yugioh, Pokemon, etc? If you don't buy the whole deck at a time, just like 4 cards for $0.50, they charge you the cost of postage and the envelope and it costs you more! What a concept!

    1. Re:Welcome to reality by jarkus4 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      1. Patreon was newer responsible for covering fees, it was always on creator side
      2. Fees have two components: percentage of amount and fixed sum. In current system all payments are made together so the fixed part is paid once only. In new system all payments will be made separately so fixed amount is added to every payment. Basically for every extra pledge I make I waste the fee amount. For large pledge its largely irrelevant, but for small ones it means huge increase in costs
      3. Patreon takes 5% as their fee. Now that they don't offer payment aggregation service and so become the LEAST efficient way of supporting the creator, why should I give it to them? So far the cost of convenience was low as aggregation lowered the external costs, but now they will be just taking 5% on top of other ways to support for a "fanpage" and paywall system of questionable quality.

    2. Re:Welcome to reality by mordred99 · · Score: 1

      It has nothing to do with knowing how payment processing works, it has to do with knowing what your payment is. People unconsciously budget their money and want to know how much stuff costs. When you throw variable rates into the mix, it is hard for some people to do the math. There are two, big issues here which have nothing to do with entitlement or what ever your indignation is.

      * Patreon switched the model 180 degrees without much notice. They are now making the Patreons pay more where as before it was the person receiving the money. Patreons have every right to be pissed, as now they are spending more.

      * Patreon has not confirmed if they are going to do everything as 1 transaction or not. This is the big thing. If all my stuff goes through as 1 transaction, then the fees are minimal. If I support 10 artists @ $1 a piece, and they all get charged on the same day (first of the month typically) then they should be one $10 transaction with one transaction fee.

    3. Re:Welcome to reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they have clarified to confirm that the entire point to this change is because they decided to deaggregate transactions

    4. Re:Welcome to reality by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Could you come back in a couple of months and let us know whether it's changed?

      There'll be a lag on the impact, as a lot of people wont realise how much extra this is costing until it's hit their credit cards. That'll be the test.

    5. Re:Welcome to reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and the check's in the mail, and I won't cum in your mouth.

  24. Re:Crocodile tears ahoy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Person A creates something Person B likes. Person B wants them to keep creating more things they like, so they give Person A money.

    Please feel free to explain where the "moochers" and "panhandlers" are in this equation.

    1% of the people on Patreon are "creators" who actually make something that people want to pay for.

    99% are moochers looking for free money.

    That said, all this drama ignores the one and only reason that Patron did this -- because they believe it will make more money for THEM. Patron is not a charity.

  25. Warning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Be warned: if you try building a patron replacement in the US you really need to make sure you're on the right side of the law before you have the IRS, the SEC _and_ Homeland security breathing down your neck for, of let's see, money laundering, funding terrorists, insurance fraud, and tax evasion. No, I'm not a lawyer, I don't work for patreon, but I have passing knowledge of how hard is moving money internationally between third parties.

  26. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by rudy_wayne · · Score: 1

    The money they spend on their operations and covering fraud has to come from some where, therefore what is your proposal?

    The cost of operation is small. The majority of their cost is in the big expensive office buildings, overpaid executives and hundreds of employees who do nothing of value.

  27. No surprise by TuballoyThunder · · Score: 1

    That is what happens when you outsource a basic business function like collecting revenue. Similarly, content creators complaining about Googleâ(TM)s YouTube or Facebook policies should rethink their decision on where they host content.

  28. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If if(sic) the only way we can get away from these life sucking vampires is to quit using their currency, then so be it. They aren't providing value commensurate to the fee. It has to stop.

    Feel free to start up your own payment processor and offer your services for free. I'm sure Patreon will be glad to use your service. Free market for the win.

  29. Re: Hilarious! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right wingers don't claim that taxes and involuntary fees are good ideas. That's the real issue here. Right wingers are consistent with their position. Lefties aren't consistent, and are actually very hypocritical.

  30. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2

    Slashdot isn't 'social media'. It's more like 'antisocial media'.

    --
    echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  31. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by suutar · · Score: 1

    It's not the 2% (actually 2.9 iirc, call it 3), it's the 35 cents per. If it was just 3% and nothing else, I doubt anyone would be stressed.

  32. "They didn't ask first." by sehlat · · Score: 2

    We trusted them with our wallets and they have told us that OUR wallets are THEIR property. It follows from that that Patreon cannot be trusted. I've canceled my smaller donations and am going to contact them about alternatives, since I do want to support their work. I'm also going to be contacting my bigger beneficiaries about alternatives.

    Patreon is toast as far as I'm concerned. There is NO way they can apologize their way out of the attitude they have demonstrated.

  33. Let's do the calculations by Barefoot+Monkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    According to Patreon's blog entry, previously creators received anywhere from 85%-93% of donations. Now they receive exactly 95% of pledges, but only a part of the amount paid by the patron counts as "the pledge".

    Let x be the total amount paid by a patron for a pledge, and p be the value of the pledge.
    x = 1.029p + 0.35

    Solving for the worst case, where the 95% of the pledge that the creator receives is at least 85% of all money donated, to match that under the new system the patron would need to pledge at least $3.95, which would cost the patron $4.42. That's what a patron will need to pay to avoid the creator receiving less than the worst case under the old system. Paying $5 is hardly better - let's look at the $1-$5 range, which is what most patrons are probably giving:

    From now on, patrons who pledge $1 have to pay $1.38, and the creator receives less than 69% of that. Patrons who want to pay $1 to each of their recipients are out of luck, and must choose between increasing their monthly Patreon expense or give up donating. When patrons spend $5 the creator sees less that 86% of that, which is basically the same as the old system's worst case.

    Okay, but at what point does the new system work out better for the creator than the old system's best case? The answer is: never. Even if a donor pledges a million dollars a month the creator gets barely over 92% of it.

    ---

    To sum it all up, Patreon is raising its fees dramatically, so instead of creators receiving 85%-93% of money given by patrons, they will now receive 69%-86% in practice.

    In addition, they will also have fewer patrons because new hidden fees on the payer's side will turn many potential and existing patrons off.

    And on top of that, the minimum pledge of $1 now costs 38% extra, all the patrons who used to sponsor multiple creators at $1 each but aren't willing to pay 38% extra per month on Patreon will now have to choose between dropping more than a third of their sponsored creators or dropping out of Patreon entirely. Either way, creators lose many of their patrons.

    If Patreon simply hiked their fees honestly instead of instead of adding the extra "35c plus 2.9% of your pledge that that count as part of your pledge" hidden service fee for patrons to disguise the fee hike then it would creators would grumble about losing roughly an eighth of their net revenue but at least wouldn't be losing patrons too. Keeping all the fees on the receiver's is better for everybody.

    1. Re:Let's do the calculations by jerry33 · · Score: 1

      I now support two content providers. I'm not dropping them (yet) as $1.78 isn't that big a deal, but I sure won't be adding any to the list or increasing the amount of my support. There were a few others I was considering adding, but no longer. I just see this as a cash grab by Patreon. Perhaps the CEO or CFO is getting ready to abscond with the money :-)

    2. Re:Let's do the calculations by drsquare · · Score: 1

      The worst part is, they now levy the transaction charge on every single post, rather than on the single monthly payment.

    3. Re:Let's do the calculations by drsquare · · Score: 1

      Apparently they've received a lot of VC and are priming for IPO. It's a cash grab to boost revenues.

    4. Re:Let's do the calculations by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      Charging the patrons 35 cents per pledge is excessive. What Patreon should do is charge them 35 cents per MONTH, and then do the sensible thing and put through only one charge transaction per month no matter how many creators the patron supports. Those charge transactions are what create most of their monthly costs.

  34. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by grahammm · · Score: 1

    It's not the 2% (actually 2.9 iirc, call it 3), it's the 35 cents per. If it was just 3% and nothing else, I doubt anyone would be stressed.

    Or even if each patron was only charged $0.35 on top of the 102.9% of the total of their pledges each month.

  35. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Shogun37 · · Score: 1

    More like "pyschopathic media."

  36. Re:Crocodile tears ahoy! by belg4mit · · Score: 1

    Watch better stuff. The channels I donate to rarely tout patreon. They either have very few supporters and/or produce insanely high quality videos that I wish to continue seeing e.g; Science Asylum and Applied Science.

    --
    Were that I say, pancakes?
  37. Re: Hilarious! by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

    No, right wingers love taxes when it's taxes and fees from a government that calls itself a corporation. Plus, they love jerking off military contractors.

    --
    This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  38. Re:Crocodile tears ahoy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "99% are moochers looking for free money."

    [citation needed]

  39. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

    He was complaining that there is a low value for what they charge compared to the services they provide, so the proposal would be that they charge more reasonable rates for their services.

    --
    This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  40. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by king+neckbeard · · Score: 1

    But that requires an enormous capital investment, and de facto involves bribing politicians enough to let you in on the racket. Either that, or effective antitrust law breaks up the financial industry sufficiently enough to have a competitive market, but let's be realistic.

    --
    This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  41. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once upon a time, MC, Amex, DC, CB, and Visa processing was the higher of a flat dollar amount, or percentage of total sale. For a ten dollar purchase, visa charged four dollars. For a fifty dollar purchase, visa charged six dollars.

    Today, there is a per transaction charge of around a quarter, plus a percentage of the sale, albeit it now a more reasonable 4% rather than the 12 % it used to be.

    That percentage transaction fee can be adjusted so that it, and it alone can cover all of the operating expenses of the payment processor.

  42. Flattr? Liberapay? by GNious · · Score: 1

    Am looking around for alternatives, and wondering if anyone here use either Flattr or Liberapay, either as a creator or a supported ?

  43. For a moment I read by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Patreon hits donors with new FECES" and thought "Wow, did they run out of new ones?"

  44. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by DogDude · · Score: 1

    Well, people are too selfish and lazy to shop locally, with cash, so nothing is going to change.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
  45. Top kek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nazis forced off platforms like Patreon, accept btc, get rich. Kosher goyim benefit from more "progress."

    Right side of history.

  46. Ludicrous Overhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or they could move our of San Francisco and run Pateron from a strip mall in NJ, keep fees low and actually be profitable.

  47. Bitcoin (Cash) would work fine. by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Fees are under 5 cents. Who knows about a system that lets me do scheduled payments (onchain, not via an exchange)?

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  48. Transaction fees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are tax deductible. They're doing it to make up for the increase in foreign patrons, whose EU tax and pretty much all around Internet spending laws are insane.

  49. Why jack it up so fast? by Neuronwelder · · Score: 1

    Are they closing soon?

  50. Re:Crocodile tears ahoy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Universal basic income eliminates all other forms of welfare, significantly reducing costs and shrinking the size of the government, ultimately saving the taxpayers money. As a fiscal conservative, you should already know this. But there's the rub: you're NOT a fiscal conservative. You're just a fucking retard with second-hand opinions you really know nothing about.

  51. SatoshiPay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This seems like an opportunity for SatoshiPay.io

    Now using Stellar Lumens (STR/XLM)

  52. Re: Crocodile tears ahoy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uhhh... arenâ(TM)t you just repeating the party line of progressives? They love to steal via taxation.

  53. Obvious Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is processing fees, so Patreon should strive to simply those collection fees for the donor. If they have many monthly donations that all hit on the 1st of the month, charge them 1 lump sum instead of multiple small donations.

    If donations are too scattered across the month/time period, then have the Donor have a "donor" fund that they recharge once a month (like, $30 a month), that they can then use to give to donors (in the form of Donor Bucks or some stupid Patreon only currency that can be paid to the creators in proper currency. Like the Bits system in twitch or whatever).

    Personally, the idea of a donor fund is appealing to me - it would allow me to budget X dollars a month for charitable donations, and maybe I use that for a few recurring subscriptions, or I can hand out a dollar here or there to something I see on youtube that I want to reward. Just like the busker playing the Rocky theme on his trumpet outside the stadium - I don't want to give him $2 a month forever, but maybe I want to throw a buck into the hat so to speak.

  54. Re: Wealth extraction by payment processors must s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Something something Litecoin.

  55. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Cederic · · Score: 1

    I have to admit, that's the bit that confuses the hell out of me.

    That's such an obvious way to minimise transaction fees (which are to the detriment of creators, patrons and patreon themselves) that it just doesn't make sense not to do it.

  56. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by Cederic · · Score: 1

    Nonsense. Take VISA, their operational costs are over $6 billion a year.

    Now look at page six of their annual report:
    http://s1.q4cdn.com/050606653/...

    They're just one of three different parties between consumer and merchant - and pages 6 and 8 detail the value that those three companies add to both parties.

    Despite this, VISA have just 15000 employees to handle over 111 billion transactions a year. Every one of those transactions has to be secure, traceable, checked for fraud, compliant with AML (and other) regulations, carry assurances on funds availability and also actually be routed correctly. Ideally in a couple of seconds or less.

    If they're as inefficient as you claim, then step up and undercut them. I know people that work there, they'd welcome the competition.

  57. The biggest fish... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... eats the most small fry.

  58. Re:Wealth extraction by payment processors must st by TRRosen · · Score: 1

    What decade did you time travel from. even the smallest businesses can get rates of .99% to 1.99% with an $0.18 transaction fee. Patreon is obviously paying less so are at least charging double their cost to cover basically non-existent overhead. (web site, small office and a handful of staff)

  59. Re: Wealth extraction by payment processors must s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ahahahahah kryptokurrency

  60. The 35 cent per pledge fee is excessive by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

    Presumably the point of the 35 cent per pledge fee is to cover transaction costs. But Patreon can aggregate those for patrons that pledge money to more than one creator each month, and simply put through one charge transaction that covers all the pledges. (They're running their business badly if they're not already doing that.) Patreon would have gotten a lot less pushback if they had instituted a single monthly fee to patrons, and would still get enough revenue to cover their processing costs. Other than what they pay the payment processor, their per-pledge cost should be minimal because it's all automated.

    As for the 2.9%, they could have continued to charge that to the creators as they do now. Putting transaction fees on the customer can be done - Brown Paper Tickets does, for example - but trying to change the model mid-stream just causes resentment.