BUT, I have no idea how many
people give up downloading the free book because the task is too daunting.
Not exact matches
After calculating and tallying
up the maximum possible number of friends each
person who
downloaded it had at any
given time, Facebook last week said the leak affected
up to 87 million
people, most of whom reside in the U.S.
This doesn't make it a bad game, it just seems like a bad choice,
given the amount of songs already included on the disc and the ones
people will end
up downloading from the store.
If you're
giving it away for free and
people are
downloading it AND some of them are leaving positive reviews, then you can ramp things
up.
People who signed
up for the list
gave us their email so that they would get a reminder when the book came out and
download it for free.
KindleUnlimited
gives me between $ 1 and $ 3 per
download (depending on how many
people download books that month), so that actually ends
up being a better deal for me:)
Just to
give people a head's
up — a week from today I'll be withdrawing my ebooks from smashwords.com, so anyone who has bought them but not yet
downloaded a copy should make sure they have one.
People download apps because they are «free,» but the companies behind the apps limit the consumer until they purchase in - game power -
ups to continue on with the game, or to
give the player an advantage.
Cambridge Analytica later obtained information from the app for about 50 million Facebook users, as the app also vacuumed
up data on
people's friends — including those who never
downloaded the app or
gave explicit consent.
The campaign boasted that more than a million
people downloaded the app, which,
given an average friend - list size of 190, means that as many as 190 million had at least some of their Facebook data vacuumed
up by the Obama campaign — without their knowledge or consent.