Spyke
asklemmy·Ask Lemmybybreb

Have you ever made money online?

Working, with no boss or mates
From home

I've been searching a bit but most things are usually, poker, filling polls, things that don't work. In general shit

I don't want big money neither. Just something in which there're no calls, meetings...

You can recommend me whatever you want but if you have experience on it better

View original on piefed.social
lemmy.world

I wrote some Minecraft mods and uploaded them to CurseForge. I still get about 5 USD every week. It used to be every 3 to 4 days but I seldomly upload new stuff now. For reference, my projects have 1.6M total downloads combined, 2k weekly.

It's nowhere near enough for sustaining life, but it's like pocket money for me to buy games and renew my domain.

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brebreply
piefed.social

how do you get it CurseForge pays you? Donations?
And have you uploaded other ones which didn't get money?
Thanks

23

CurseForge shares a slice of their ad revenue with creators, so getting money simply depends on how many people visited your page. Even if a mod is unpopular, you still get a minuscule amount of money.

I should mention that you get paid in "points", and these points can be used to redeem money. For example, every 100 points = 5 USD.

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0x01reply
lemmy.ml

2k downloads weekly it looks like not dollars

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[deleted]reply
piefed.world

$5 per week for the ads on their page(s) that have about 2,000 downloads per week. So $20 a month for 8,000 downloads.

They don't get a dollar a download.

6

I just though they mean they have 1.6 million downloads and get 2k weekly in return

2

I have. I have a site that at its peak was getting around 2.5k views a day, with an audience in a high affinity category for spending money.

I would do better than any other site at answering the search intent of my audience, and would direct people to where they could buy what they were searching for.

I used eBay and Amazon affiliate links to earn a commission whenever people bought things after clicking through my links.

At its height it used to bring in about 7k USD per month in profit. 2.3m in overall credited sales in it's best year.

Sadly, this model is being completely destroyed by ai search engines that intend to redirect all search traffic to their walled garden of paid advertising.

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The best year was 74k USD total profit. Costs were minimal, ran my own server at $10 a month with backups

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lemmy.world

37 minutes since posting and no one has yet mentioned OnlyFans? Come on Fedi-friends, we can do better.

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lemmus.org

Yes. There is.

There's actually a lot of great communities and material by, about, and for real people.

Dadbod and mature are plenty popular.

Just takes a little wandering off the comercial street of pushing barbies and kens together.

6

While the supply may be higher than the demand, don't sell yourself short. I believe in you.

12

If you have a good voice you could try Quinn or something similar. Or just do male porn, that makes a pretty fucking decent income too.

2

I mean, feel free to shower off any patriarchal sexism before joining the Red Umbrella.

1

Ah well, you can always start firing emails to whoever saying you're a Nigerian prince or something...

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lemmy.world

You can create designs and upload them to redbubble (stickers printed on demand)! I have some that are basically just anime screenshots and I get like...a couple bucks a month lol. If you actually tried though, you might be able to make some actual money.

edit - I looked and it turns out I get a couple bucks a year. xD But I only really have two designs that sell, so yeah. If I made more designs I'd do better.

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bitjunkiereply
lemmy.world

Are you able to give more detail about why? Like was it the tariffs or some facet of social policy?

5

That was what happened to my friends eBay store here in Canada. Tariffs meant he couldn't ship to the states anymore and the ongoing Canada Post strikes made it difficult to ship within Canada. Still possible but just not really worth it anymore.

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lemmy.dbzer0.com

I've made about $20 from the sale of my album , I thought people would like it more. Oh well, it's not putting me off from making more music!

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bitjunkiereply
lemmy.world

You'd probably make more if you didn't post dead links to it

7

I work remote, and my company is a remote first company. But I still have talk to people and go to meetings. I take it these are deal breakers for you? Can you code?

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lemmy.world

Just about the only way I've ever made real money has been online in the manner you're talking about.

I enjoy thrifting and flipping, which is harder than it might seem to be successful at. It requires familiarity with what a good quality item is, a robust knowledge of the kinds of prices you might get for those things and some knowledge of refurbishment. Most flippers will pick one or two things that they specialize in, usually based on an existing hobby, because they already have a baseline knowledge of it by being interested in it. Being willing to clean, replace parts, paint, fix or otherwise renew the item is usually the most consistent way of making a return on investment that might make it worth your time. However, there really are some golden opportunities which sometimes appear and another needed skill is being in tune to where those show up. The estate sale of some eccentric artist who has an amazing antique collection, or the office that's liquidating a bunch of computers or furniture, will be advertised briefly in some narrow window of view and time unique to your location and to catch it you need to be quick to act and decisive. I made a ton of mistakes early on and learned to be a lot more careful about impulse buying, but I also got good enough at it to make rent.

The other part of being self employed is the dual edged sword of freedom. You are never at work and yet you're always at work. There's no time "off" anymore, any day or any hour you might find yourself working and it's unrelenting. Unless you are remarkably disciplined you will probably never have a "weekend off". There's no meetings or bosses to answer to but that also means that if you mess up there's nobody else to blame but yourself. It has its own challenges and drawbacks, so don't let yourself be fooled into thinking you wouldn't find new things to piss you off.

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reddthat.com

There's a guy in town who refurbishes old furniture. He watches the local buy/sell pages like a hawk and grabs any nice furniture left out for free, and he'll refurbish it to resell for a healthy profit. It's honestly a respectable gig given how much furniture people end up getting rid of, especially if there's young renters who just have whatever they got from a garage sale and don't want to move half of their crap to the next place

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lemmy.world

Kind of, but not much, certainly not anything like a steady income.

I gave one of those apps a try that give you rewards for installing and playing games. After a couple of years I earned up enough points to get about a $50 gift card. None of the games on it are amazing, but some of them are passably entertaining when you just need to kill some time. They're all, of course, loaded with ads.

This is more of theoretical money at this point, but years ago I bought a small quantity of Bitcoin (like less than 0.1 BTC) and I've just kind of been sitting on that. It was about $20 when I bought it, it's worth quite a bit more than that now. If I were to cash out now, it wouldn't exactly be life-changing money by any stretch of the imagination, but it might get me a crappy used car, or maybe offset the cost of a nice vacation for me and my wife.

I do the Google opinion reward surveys, which basically pays out as credit for the android app store. Every so often it adds up to enough for me to spring for some paid app I wouldn't have bought otherwise, or maybe a book or movie or something.

If you want to count it as online, for a while I did taskrabbit, basically an app to get hired doing odd jobs for people, putting IKEA furniture together, yard work, hanging shelves, etc. That wasn't a bad side gig if you're handy, but I don't have the free time for it these days and it was kind of a pain figuring it out on my taxes at the end of the year.

Not me, but I have a friend who was a stripper for a while, when she got out of it, she actually made a decent little chunk of money selling her used stripper heels because some foot fetish people are all about that. She figured out that it could be feasible to just buy some heels, wear them around for a few weeks, and sell them for a profit. She decided it was more trouble than it was worth for her but something like that is potentially an option as well, pretty sure used shoes aren't the only thing with a weird fetish secondary market you could take advantage of if you know where to look to sell them.

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reddthat.com

I hate to say it but if you want to make a living you kinda have to interact with other people a bit. I'm currently an independent contractor for one of my previous employees. I work when I want for as long as I want, my only requirement is to work less than 32 hours a week and of course to keep my client happy. I have a boss and I do attend some meetings but it's incredibly chill. I would however much prefer if they hired me on full time, but at this point I don't think that's happening.

Otherwise at home there's always some kind of service you can provide. Painting is easy to pick up and some landlords repaint every property between tenants. Any kind of converting trash into something with value is also a good option. For example I know of a guy in town who collects furniture people leave out for trash and refurbishes it to resell.

If you're handy you could even go the extreme route of house flipping, which usually is most profitable if you live in the houses you flip. I've seen a few run down houses bought from estates sell for way below market value then flip for much more, since families just want mom and dad's house sold, and buyers often don't want to do a ton of repairs before moving in. Alternatively buying up run down properties to repair and rent out might be a good path to a solid living too

Or just go all in with a small business. I've not seen sellers of affordable and decent looking Corsi-Rosenthal boxes for example, or if you can find some kind of furniture/device for special needs people there's usually a huge premium charged for those as "medical devices" which are often paid for by Medicaid so it would be very easy to undercut established brands that way. In a similar vein there's a huge hole in the market for durable furniture. The Amish famously make extremely high quality furniture that holds incredible value due to its high durability, and you don't have to be Amish to make high quality furniture. Or just find something else you can sell. I saw you mention some programming skills, maybe you can make some kind of B2B app. I've seen it said that anything that's a spreadsheet can be turned into an app and sold to businesses. Or just make a bunch of phone apps and see if any happen to take off.

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reddthat.com

So specifically I was thinking of adaptive furniture. There's special programs in some states for folks with long term disabilities to help with purchasing adaptive furniture. Think restraints/locks/alarms for things that a cognitively impaired person might need, such as if they get up in the middle of the night, or door alarms and the like.

For a real world example, my youngest was diagnosed with level 3 autism. Because of his diagnosis he qualifies for our states Medicaid expansion which is intended to cover all of the random costs of having a special needs child that normal kids wouldn't cost, like door alarms, a fridge lock or we almost had them pay for putting a fence in our yard because he tries to run when outside. We were looking at what could be described as a crib for kids too big for a crib, and all of the options cost a minimum of $10k and a median of about $20k. That would be an extremely easy market to disrupt with a lower cost solution since I highly doubt it actually costs anywhere near $10k to make such a bed

2

Back when the first SD Card adapter for the PS Vita was released it only came with some CAD files. So I ordered like a hundred PCBs from a Chinese manufacturer, alongside the MicroSD slots, soldered them at home and sold them for five bucks a pop on eBay. Cost me less than one buck per piece in parts. I didn't make a lot, but it was some nice money for a broke student

8

Yeah, by investing it through an online broker.

But also a few focus group questionnaires.

My wife buys and resells furniture and clothing quite a bit. She doesn't turn a profit but we also spend almost nothing on either as a result.

7

Do you have skills you can freelance with? I’ve occasionally gotten work on Upwork and there are other platforms that might be viable, but it really matters to find jobs looking for skills you have, and having skills that are in demand. You have a client, not a boss, and whether or not you need to be in meetings depends on the kinds of jobs you go after.

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lemmy.world

i sold feet pics to a guy I met on TF2 and made a couple hundred bucks. now he's going to be my best man at my eventual wedding I'm

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lemmy.world

Okay, so I'm already a natural flirt, and I was going through a hypersexual phase due to undiagnosed bipolar II. He was chatty in voice chat, kinda smug, but funny, and he said I was a good medic, so I was his dedicated pocket medic for weeks. He kept bragging about his big dick, and eventually clicked that he likes when people call him out and insult him, and eventually we got on the topic of findom.

it was really funny, because one minute im bullying him and demanding money, and then the next I'm like "hey wanna play payload"

I also met my boyfriend on TF2, also through my hypersexual issues, but I'm medicated now and we have a stable long distance relationship. Me, my boyfriend, and foot guy all play TF2 together, and we lightly bully each other. My boyfriend knows about me and foot guy's past, so we dunk on him for it, and he fights back by being better at the game than either of us.

Also, I've only seen foot guy's face once, and my boyfriend has never seen it, so it'll be extra funny if we don't meet in person until the wedding lol

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stringerereply
sh.itjust.works

Thanks for the explanation. That was going to turn into Lewis Black's "If it weren’t for my horse, I wouldn’t have spent that year in college".

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stringerereply
sh.itjust.works

It's from ome of Lewis Black's standup specials...

"Behind me, I heard a young woman of 25 say, "If it weren’t for my horse, I wouldn’t have spent that year in college." Now, I'm gonna repeat that, because it bears repeating. "If it weren't for my horse..." as in, giddyup, giddyup, let's go — "I wouldn't have spent that year in college," which is a degree-granting institution. Don't think about that too long, or BLOOD will shoot out your NOSE!"

He goes on about how a phrase like that will sit on the back of you mind, fester, and cause anyeurisms. Like unfinished TV shows.

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A friend, not me. He used to do voice acting, people requested small scripts (3 or 4 sentences) and he sent them an audio. He was completely amateur, and without any equipment (besides his phone) he made like 10-20€ per week with no effort. I don’t know what app/website he used tho :/

5

Only by luck. Got asked to build logic for an online quiz, $200. Occasional focus groups pay $50 or so.

Not even diet coke money but yes.

I don't think that there is much in the way of unskilled boss free, meetings free, online money making because the supply worldwide of people willing to do that work so far exceeds the supply. The average earnings on onlyfans is like $3 a month.

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lemmy.world

How big are your tits?

Do you mind me asking why do you want to avoid (what seems like) people in general?

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rollmagmareply
lemmy.world

People are great. I don't mean to offend, but a generic dislike of people like that is a sign of low self esteem. Or any other of the myriad of mental illnesses we have today. That's why I asked. This needs to be addressed, simply moving into the mountains is not a solution.

Again, I don't want to sound confrontational, but psychiatry has studied this for decades, it's not a new thing. I wished we stopped making jokes with this subject. If yall dislike people that much, maybe you need some help. I'm saying it sincerely, not to belittle your individual experiences.

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TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

You must avoid the news if you're unaware that people are terrible.

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sh.itjust.works

The news is biased towards displaying the worst of humanity. SOME people are terrible. Most are just people, nice in some ways, not so nice in others.

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TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

Okay fine. Try driving a car for 15 minutes and then tell me 80% of people aren't stupid assholes.

1

Idk where you live but in the last long drives across my country I did, 7h each way, I found just 1 asshole on the whole way, and my asshole finding rate is higher than normal since I drive my parents BMW while respecting speed limits and some people get competitive, weird. Most typical drives across towns, 15m, are completely normal. Sorry to say but your anecdotally experience is not universal. Where I live most people drive responsibly and we have plenty slopes and curves.

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reddthat.com

I always return to the line from Men In Black. "A person is smart but people are scared dumb animals and you know it"

Basically every individual person in a one on one conversation can make for a wonderful interaction, but once you can't single out an individual to learn how brilliant they are at something you just have a sea of people defined by the lowest common denominator

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I used to think more like that. These last few years though, I've really seen the darkness humanity is capable of. Half of America is happily accepting fascism right now. I won't excuse that away. And it's far from the only example of what I'm saying.

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rollmagmareply
lemmy.world

Indeed I do. Here on Lemmy, for instance, anything with news in the name gets blocked. I follow my local news on my own terms by going to the news pages instead of being fed whatever is popular today. This helps a lot. Logically speaking, "news" must include mostly bad things, otherwise it'd be called "sames", (assuming, as I do, that we live in mostly good times). I'd recommend to everyone, specially people on the younger side, to try to experience life by yourself and connect to people one on one, mass media is a cancer.

0

Taskrabbit has lots of odd jobs that can be done for money if you're looking for gig work if you're not solely lookimg for 100% online.

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I'm a network engineer for a large telecom company. So technically, yes?

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Yes but it was obviously never enough to pay bills or purchase anything that was really expensive. I've been using these websites and apps that are referred to as "beer money sites/apps" on and off for over the past decade. I don't know exactly how much I've made over the years but I do know it was definitely several hundreds of dollars. I used to use them to buy cheap games and older consoles from Amazon but my most recent purchase was a cheap laptop that I bought about a year ago.

They're not great but they are currently the only way for me to buy stuff online.

3

i went on omegle with a fake webcam feed of a woman and well... yea... it was easy money

3

I used to play team fortress 2 for years. One day i got a message on steam from someone saying he's giving me $600 for my whole inventory. So i guess that counts as making money online?

3

I made $25 once on a content mill website, and there's some folks who've made a decent income churning out such stuff. But given the current climate with AI I don't know that this is a great option anymore.

Honestly, the best thing to do is look at your current skillset and see what opportunities fit. Most of the stuff where you make real money, unfortunately, will involve some calls and meetings.

As an aside, it's also not a huge pot of money, but UI testing on Testbirds can have higher-than-average payouts than your usual micro-gig website stuff. It all varies though, and you can't necessarily bank on what jobs come down the pipe for your consideration.

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I'm currently attempting it now. I'll bookmark this so I can let you know in the future.

2

I once made around 50 euros designing a keyboard layout for a person I met on Reddit. He did international transfer over bank lol.

I have made money with crypto. Usually I would follow this friends of mine, he tells me when to buy and when to sell. To get it to the bank, you transfer from the exchange to either Coinbase or Binance and then withdraw to your bank there.

I have made money from a website me and by friend was hosting. Used ad services, withdraw to PayPal and then to the bank.

I technically would have made money from YouTube with some thousands of views, but are not opted in to any program there.

I would like to recommend you some freelance job, but I don't have experience in that field...

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I've been on one for about 4 years and have made I think about $600 over that time playing very casually. I know there's way more intense people that can make a bit more but likely still not a living wage, just nice pocket money. Also, if you're outside of the US, they seem to be cutting down on opportunities.

The con is you're essentially selling them your data via polls, app downloads, etc. Pro is money, I guess.

Look up sites owned by Prodege, they're all pretty similar, and they do pay out if you provide real info (e.g. paypal). Most complaints you'll see online about people not getting paid out is because they don't want to provide that, which is fair enough.

Oh also UserTesting, which legit pays out well (10-20USD per 15-30min test), but you need to allow screen/mic recording and it takes a lot more involvement. I imagine investing a bit of time into it could fare pretty decently, but I don't have that kind of energy or time.

2

I'm in a forum where people are making money off of reddit and other social media, using hordes of accounts, aka voting, etc. not the propaganda bots that reddit barely controls. It's usually OF, or some dropping links or website. Of course with reddit, it's hard because they are coming with new ways to detect other methods of evasion

1

I've done some stuff through Appen before, it's AI training projects mostly, it's not well paid and the projects I've been on became a slog after a few weeks but it's work from home and you don't really have a boss. You're just expected to do your x hours of work on your project(s) per week.

I just did a bit of searching and apparently they lost their contact with Google and they got a lot of people during the pandemic (some have stuck around) so maybe not viable anymore.

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brebreply
piefed.social

i said working. I just don't want to have bosses, partners, meetings

15

You're aupposed to be at least 13 to have an account here. You might want to fuck off for a couple years when you're ready for an adult conversation and your reading eyes/listening ears are developed.

Everyone is watching you suck at reading comprehension, and it doesn't even have to be like this.

Maybe a better agression release that doesn't involve other people? Or at least people who are willing to participate in whstever komd of contest you feel like you need to releive yourself through.

8

I see plenty of people that just stream themselves sleeping getting donations and shit. People very much will just give you money freely if you know how to find them.

Sleeping on a stream? That ain't workin'! Thats the way you do it: money ain't for nothing get your checks for free.

8

I mean. That steam will cost money so you will need to bring in more than the internet and electricity costs plus the amorization of the equipment. And a bit of non sleeping time.

2

Oh, yeah. Performance art is destroying the economies.

Not landlording nepo pedos gambling all the milk money on the stockmarket.

Epstein Files.

Don't come back until your homework is done, or you'll get human trafficked by billionaires.

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