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JuiceSSH – Give me my pro features back(nproject.io)
325 points by jandeboevrie 17 hours ago | 135 comments
  • cube0012 hours ago

    Support is unresponsive, this looks like an exit scam.

    Finally this is getting traction after leaving many of us out of pocket.

    Both developers [1] are working in management at Microsoft and AWS while ignoring emails, leaving JuiceSSH to rot because they couldn't be bothered to wrap up cleanly (refund, release a final update with pro features enabled, release the source code etc.)

    Paul Maddox [2]: Director - Cloud & AI Solutions Engineering @ Microsoft - last reposted a month ago

    Tom Maddox [3]: Head of AWS Solutions Architecture for Local Markets - last commented two months ago

    Don't bother going back to Google either. A Play store "support specialist" just told me:

    I tried to create a refund request but its not allowing to create one since the date of the transaction is out of our refund policy as we can only process refunds for up to 120 days only after the transaction was charged.

    [1]: https://juicessh.com/about or https://sonelli.com/about

    [2]: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-maddox

    [3]: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tom-maddox-87236b27

    • opello10 hours ago |parent

      The about link above gave a Cloudfront-looking failure, but the base domain here worked and is where the app help link takes me, albeit to /faq:

      https://sonelli.com/

      I reactivated my license a few months ago using the in-app functionality but I'm not quite sure when I'm afraid.

  • tiagod14 hours ago

    I've been using this app for years. A couple months I needed to use forwarding, which is a Pro feature.

    I thought I already bought it years ago, but the app asked me to pay so I bought it again. It instantly locked me out of the whole app. Later I checked and I had bought pro already in 2014 (for 5€, and I paid 30€ this time). Absolutely no answer to my emails.

    Thanks for the instructions.

    • smileybarry12 hours ago |parent

      If you haven't already, you can ask Google for a refund on that (the second, recent) in-app purchase:

      https://support.google.com/googleplay/answer/15574897?hl=en

      The policies are "up to 48 hrs after purchase" but I'm sure "purchase does not work at all" is an exception. (It is on iOS)

      • stavros12 hours ago |parent

        I've never succeeded on getting a refund with Google. There were a few apps that tricked me into buying a subscription (namely Musescore and Yazio), I immediately asked Google for a refund because I didn't actually get what I thought I was getting, and they denied me both times.

        Now I just don't buy anything on the Play store that I can't afford to just be outright scammed on.

        • tomrod10 hours ago |parent

          Two that I lost on play store:

          1. World of Goo. Bought by Netflix, sunsetted, can't install old versions anymore

          2. Monopoly. Bought by EA. Sunsetted/renamed to zzzMonopoly. Can't install old versions anymore.

          FDroid has my attention since these happened.

          • llbbdd3 hours ago |parent

            This is how I find out that I can't install World of Goo anymore. Man.

        • ahmeni6 hours ago |parent

          The Musescore app is just a minefield of subscription farming, it was somehow miserable even with an existing subscription the number of times it tried to get me to also get their weird AI learning platform. Now I've left it entirely.

        • zx808011 hours ago |parent

          Was you able to eventually unsunbcribe from Musescore?

          • stavros11 hours ago |parent

            Yes, I could unsubscribe from both easily, but I wanted a refund because I couldn't use the subscriptions.

      • cube0012 hours ago |parent

        > I'm sure "purchase does not work at all" is an exception

        Nope, a Play store "support specialist" just told me: "I tried to create a refund request but its not allowing to create one since the date of the transaction is out of our refund policy as we can only process refunds for up to 120 days only after the transaction was charged."

        • windexh8er11 hours ago |parent

          Your credit card company will reverse it for you. A non-working product with unanswered emails will allow you to easily get your money back while also giving the middle finger to Google.

          • derefr11 hours ago |parent

            I believe that will result in Google locking you out of your Google account, including Gmail, YouTube, any Google Cloud projects, etc.

            • denkmoon10 hours ago |parent

              This is exactly what will happen, you have no recourse. Technofeudalism is real.

              • windexh8er9 hours ago |parent

                I've done it in the past (~2015). Honestly if Google locked me out of all of those other purchases it'd be great grounds to sue them. If everyone started doing this it would prevent them from doing this in the first place and may be additional fodder for (hopefully) continued anti-trust losses in court. If your life is tied to Google in that way then it's a risk no matter what you do and you should probably think about how to reduce that risk. I don't have anything other than purchases tied to my Google accounts anymore.

                • vpShane7 hours ago |parent

                  Peanuts to an elephant.

    • TheRoque10 hours ago |parent

      Why would you pay for such feature ? Termux is basically a small Linux in your pocket and has anything you'd ever need regarding SSH

      • cyberrock5 hours ago |parent

        JuiceSSH was popular starting 2013-2014 and Termux was released in 2015. ConnectBot technically existed before but its keyboard has always left more to be desired.

      • BenjiWiebe8 hours ago |parent

        It's far quicker and easier to hit a toggle in JuiceSSH to turn on a port forward than to open up termux and type in the commands.

        • idatum4 hours ago |parent

          > It's far quicker and easier to hit a toggle in JuiceSSH

          termux via F-droid is far better now than JuiceSSH Pro. Termux:Widget let's you launch an SSH tunnel script with one click. I stopped using JuiceSSH Pro more than a year ago once I realized this.

        • TheRoque8 hours ago |parent

          I can believe that. But there are ways to reduce this overhead to almost nothing (aliasing, a script, a shell with nice autocomplete...)

  • Grimblewald14 hours ago

    > juice is best ssh for android

    I am not contending truth here, but also I have never even tried / considered anything outside of termux + unexpected keyboard, and I can't imagine anything improving my experience.

    what makes juicessh so good? I guess I'm asking for a "Convince me to try it" style review of juice.

    • petesoper11 hours ago |parent

      "I guess I'm asking for a "Convince me to try it" style review of juice" Notice this is about juicessh becoming unusable and no longer having any support. That should satisfy you.

    • opan13 hours ago |parent

      I used JuiceSSH many years ago, had the Pro version when it was briefly free once. I've used Termux for years now and it seems better to me. You can set up ssh keys and aliases like usual, multihop works. I think I used to use Hacker's Keyboard but now I use AnySoftKeyboard since it had better alt layout support (e.g. Dvorak, Workman). I've got a row at the top with ctrl, tab, arrows, esc... It even works to do C-a, C-c, C-v in other apps. I'd recommend the combo. All available from F-Droid.

      • wolvoleo11 hours ago |parent

        Yes I use termux too. What I love is that everything works that works on a normal computer too. And the same way. Even ssh keys on yubikeys work great with open keychain and okcagent.

    • venusenvy479 hours ago |parent

      I bought Juice pro many years ago and use it daily on my phone and Tablet. I like how it gives my one click access to my handful of servers, and I liked the syncing between devices. I started using Termux last week and it seems like a decent alternative. The copy and paste is nicer on JuiceSSH, and I think it is more immune from getting disconnected if you switch to another app during a session.

    • jojomodding13 hours ago |parent

      For me it's mostly that it just works and was very easy to set up when I first used it.

    • Lord_Zero8 hours ago |parent

      Can I use that keyboard only with termux?

      • creshalan hour ago |parent

        No, it's a generic android keyboard and works with all apps. But you need a keyboard like it (arrow keys, ctrl, etc.) for termux to not be a total PITA to use.

        (Android has full physical keyboard support, so with it you can use Ctrl+A/Ctrl+X/Ctrl+V in all input fields. Usually a lot faster than fumbling with the touch equivalents that keep randomly bugging out…)

    • ycombinatrix12 hours ago |parent

      It has an SSH focused GUI which can be more convenient

      • worthless-trash9 hours ago |parent

        What does that mean.

        • ycombinatrix9 hours ago |parent

          Buttons

  • sowbug17 hours ago

    I haven't used my Pro purchase in years, but if I did want to ssh from my phone today, I'd use the newish Terminal app, available since Android 15. It's a full Debian virtual machine.

    • wilsonnb316 hours ago |parent

      I don’t think it is that widely available due to Snapdragon chips not supporting some feature it requires.

      Good option for Pixel owners or phones with MediaTek chips though.

      • fulafel15 hours ago |parent

        Apparently it's about software, not hardware - Qualcomm recommends running Android under a virtual machine (which lacks nested virtualization support).

        • mcbridematt10 hours ago |parent

          IIRC Qualcomm smartphone SoCs have always run some kind of hypervisor, I believe it's to allow partitioning of the CPU cores with the modem/DSP.

          They used to (mid-late 2000s) use an L4 derivative ("REX"?), with the more recent chips (including the 'X' series for PCs) using their homegrown "Gunyah" hypervisor (https://github.com/quic/gunyah-hypervisor)

        • superb_dev14 hours ago |parent

          Is this for real? Do you have any more info on this? It seems crazy to me given how popular their chips are and how many problems I’d imagine this creates

          • fulafel5 hours ago |parent

            Some more info in this comment and good search terms for further research as well. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38091082

          • user_78324 hours ago |parent

            The other HN comment already has some info, but from what I remember from r/android threads, it's because qualcomm doesn't allow unsecure (sic? unencrypted?) VMs, which, ironically, are needed to run nested Linux.

            Disclaimer, my memory on the exact terminology is extremely fuzzy. But pixels with tensor can run it just fine. And it's purely a software thing too, btw.

          • pierrec11 hours ago |parent

            It shouldn't be problematic if the processor supports it well. For example modern Windows is always running as a VM and people are barely aware of that.

            • superb_dev10 hours ago |parent

              That’s a good point, I forgot windows typically runs on top of hyperV

          • asutor14 hours ago |parent

            Using an S24 here and yeah, not available with Android 16

            • wolvoleo10 hours ago |parent

              But the S24 wasn't Qualcomm but Exynos. Weird.

      • chasil14 hours ago |parent

        I run LineageOS on both a Pixel 3a XL and a OnePlus 5. Yes, these both run Snapdragons.

        The option to install the subsystem is present on both, but I have not attempted it.

        I have loaded it onto a Pixel 6a running Graphene.

        • TheRoque10 hours ago |parent

          The option is available, but it probably won't work (show some error that the chip should allow unsecure VMs)

    • preisschild15 hours ago |parent

      Or termux, which doesnt use a VM

      • gruez14 hours ago |parent

        Yeah, another vote for Termux. The linux VM ends up being a bit laggy because it's actually a webview that renders a terminal, that's connected to the VM. More importantly though, the soft keyboard support is totally broken, so if you try to backspace more characters than you've typed, it won't let you. That sucks if do something like:

        1. type some command, hit enter

        2. hit up to edit it (because you typoed something)

        3. can't backspace because the soft keyboard thinks there's nothing to delete

        • preisschild13 hours ago |parent

          Ive always considered termux the more elegant option for userspace programs than the android terminal debian vm. I just wished android had the permission api to create user namespaces (containers) in termux

    • sunnyam17 hours ago |parent

      Do you mean Termux? I can't find any other Terminal app with a similar name

      • saidinesh517 hours ago |parent

        No Android started bundling a terminal app recently:

        https://itsfoss.com/news/google-android-linux-terminal-rollo...

        • domh16 hours ago |parent

          Huh, I did not know this. This is also present on GrapheneOS too! (I'm installing it now)

          • fmajid16 hours ago |parent

            It is extremely flaky on GrapheneOS, at least on my Pixel 8 Pro. Just typing Ctrl-D to exit will corrupt it, requiring a full reinstallation of the Debian VM

            • domhan hour ago |parent

              Oh wow. I did a very basic test this morning `ping google.com` and then ctrl+c and it seemed to work okay. Not done any more extensive testing than this though.

              Could it be that it's just very flaky on all pixel devices? Or maybe something graphene is doing to harden the OS doesn't play nicely with how it's been implemented?

            • Denatonium7 hours ago |parent

              The built-in terminal app seems to be similarly flaky on my Pixel 8. Also, the kernel it boots into is really stripped down, and it lacks a ton of essential features. I was not able to install VirtualHere client to pass through USB devices, and there's no built-in functionality. There's also no way to open it full-screen on the Pixel 8's DP-over-USB-C desktop mode. Hopefully it continues to improve, but it seems like Google is more into extracting value than they are improving their products at this point.

            • gruez14 hours ago |parent

              Control-D works fine for me. It just terminates the VM and you can restart.

              • fmajid11 hours ago |parent

                It's not 100% reproducible, but at least 50% of the time for me:

                https://social-cdn.vivaldi.net/system/media_attachments/file...

      • simlevesque17 hours ago |parent

        Enable Developper Options. It should be in the Developer menu. It's a toggle that'll enable this apk.

        • ndom9116 hours ago |parent

          Is this available outside of Pixels? I still can't find it on my OnePlus 13 running Android 16 with Jan security updates

          • cmehdy15 hours ago |parent

            The option exists on Samsung phones but is greyed out and crashes if you force it via adb. It is also marked as experimental.

          • yonatan807014 hours ago |parent

            I believe it relies on some virtualization extensions Google's CPUs have, which most phone SoCs don't support.

          • prmoustache14 hours ago |parent

            It is buggy as hell anyway.

        • seszett16 hours ago |parent

          Honestly I don't find it more useful than Termux, especially for being so much heavier.

          • cogman1016 hours ago |parent

            Just because I was curious.

            Termux is doing a container. The android terminal is doing a virtual machine. That's the difference.

            Termux would definitely be the light weight option, but you will be pinned to whatever version of the kernel your device is shipped with (may be a bit old.)

            • yjftsjthsd-h16 hours ago |parent

              No, termux isn't a container, it's running directly in userspace on the host. The only weird thing is that because it's running directly on the host, it has to be built to use unusual paths, eg. /data/data/com.termux/files/usr/bin/bash instead of /usr/bin/bash. If it used containers (which IIRC it can't because Android doesn't really support it) that would actually be easier because then it could use a chroot to make the paths look normal.

              • cogman1015 hours ago |parent

                Ah, well that stinks a little. I guess it makes sense, if android doesn't mandate a few kernel settings then working with containers might not be an option.

              • skissane12 hours ago |parent

                Couldn’t it implement a “fake chroot” by e.g. creating its own libc which wraps the real one but with path remapping, and then linking all its executables against that?

                • yjftsjthsd-h10 hours ago |parent

                  That would only work for things that use libc (so eg. most Go programs are probably not going to work). The main way that you can do an unprivileged fake chroot is proot, which termux does offer - see https://wiki.termux.com/wiki/PRoot - but that has a significant performance hit.

            • seszett13 hours ago |parent

              > you will be pinned to whatever version of the kernel your device is shipped with

              That doesn't matter much for using SSH though.

              For running more complex Linux programs or scripts Termux is indeed less comfortable (but it can still work).

  • cremp17 hours ago

    This might be a good plug for Morphie or Revanced patches to automate the patch process.

    • nfriedly14 hours ago |parent

      I'm a big fan of Revanced, but I haven't heard of Morphie - do you have a link for it? (I tried searching, but all I'm coming up with are cosmetics, chargers, and an IRC app.)

      Edit: found it: https://morphe.software/ - looks like it's sort of an offshoot of ReVanced that only supports Youtube at the moment.

      And, for those who weren't aware of ReVanced, see https://revanced.app/ - it was originally just a tweaked version of the YouTube app called Vanced (an "advanced" YouTube app, but without the "ad"s ;) - but now it's a tool that can patch a bunch of different apps.

  • ggm11 hours ago

    Thank you for reminding me about risks of cloud key storage. I think I better go wipe my .ssh/ states and re-work things to a modern keypair.

    I think ed25519 would be both shorter sigs in authorised_keys and definitely NOT what I used "back then"

  • aposm12 hours ago

    Yikes. I also just noticed that all the plugins (part of the pro feature set) rely on separate apk downloads from the Play Store, which all appear to be dead/delisted. This is really a shame, I too have thought of this as "the best" Android SSH client in the past.

  • saidinesh517 hours ago

    Wow. Thanks for this. I haven't logged into Juice SSH in years, but i thought it had all my ssh keys backed up in the cloud.

    • znpy16 hours ago |parent

      I’d start rotating those keys asap… you’re one breach away from a security nightmare

      • saidinesh514 hours ago |parent

        Yep, just did.. A lot of those devices don't even exist anymore but the keys exist lol.

      • graemep16 hours ago |parent

        You should encrypt your ssh keys anyway, and you should encrypt anything sensitive you are backing up to a cloud.

        • trey-jones16 hours ago |parent

          Private keys should never leave the device where they are created.

          • graemep15 hours ago |parent

            So no backups?

            • Tuna-Fish14 hours ago |parent

              Correct. Private keys should never be backed up. Instead, should you need a backup, you should create a distinct key for that purpose.

              • TurdF3rguson13 hours ago |parent

                That's a great plan until you're locked out of all your devices with no backup.

                • derefr11 hours ago |parent

                  I think the implication is that you should own multiple client devices capable of SSHing into things, each with their own SSH keypair; and every SSH host you interact with should have multiple of your devices’ keypairs registered to it.

                  • TurdF3rguson9 hours ago |parent

                    Right, and to never backup the keys which means losing of all your devices means you can't possibly recover.

            • leni53614 hours ago |parent

              You can have backup private keys, they don't have to be copies of some other private keys.

        • 9dev16 hours ago |parent

          Actually, you shouldn’t. You probably use an easy-to-remember password on SSH keys since you have to type them often, but that also means you’re storing one of your (let’s face it, the primary) password you have in a single file, readable to every executable your run under your account. And that means you’re one exfil away from not only getting your SSH keys compromised, but also allowing an attacker to run an offline decryption attack with unlimited attempts. This invariably leads to your main password getting compromised.

          Instead, set up SSH certificates, MFA, Yubikey, or TPM/Enclave storage for your private keys.

          • yjftsjthsd-h16 hours ago |parent

            > You probably use an easy-to-remember password on SSH keys since you have to type them often

            No, use ssh-agent and decrypt once per boot.

            > Instead, set up SSH certificates, MFA, Yubikey, or TPM/Enclave storage for your private keys.

            Granted, I agree with this, too.

          • bityard12 hours ago |parent

            > but also allowing an attacker to run an offline decryption attack with unlimited attempts. This invariably leads to your main password getting compromised.

            Do the OpenSSH authors not know about PKBDF2 or similar?

            • degamad5 hours ago |parent

              How does PBKDF2 prevent an offline decryption attack with unlimited attempts?

              All it does is slow down the attempts, but for the average person's easy-to-remember password, it's probably increasing the effort from milliseconds to a few days.

  • thih99 hours ago

    I get it why an article like this is being posted, but I’m also worried that it’s jumping to conclusions.

    Devs/support get overwhelmed, apps get buggy. A better course of action to me seems: reporting a broken app, requesting refund, waiting for the fix and switching to an alternative in the meantime.

    I also dislike that this behavior could be a reason against sideloading, especially if made more popular.

    • BenjiWiebe8 hours ago |parent

      It worked for years with no/few changes. Then the price increases and pro features stop working. I'm not too likely to give the devs the benefit of the doubt. Patch out the 'pro' check and release an update. Or reply to one of the many new 1 star reviews and say you lost access to the source code, if that's what happened.

      Complete silence + taking money...

      • thih92 hours ago |parent

        I still don’t get it. You say it yourself that it worked for years with no issues. Current behavior is bad but the community pirating the app does not seem right either.

        Popular apps get away with more user hostility and price gouging. To me this effort seems misplaced.

        • TiredOfLife22 minutes ago |parent

          > Current behavior is bad but the community pirating the app does not seem right either.

          Feature people PAID!!!! for suddenly stopped working.

  • khanan16 hours ago

    Replaced JuiceSSH two years ago with ConnectBOT (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.connectbot...) as a "free" alternative. Never looked back.

    • genpfault16 hours ago |parent

      > ConnectBot

      https://f-droid.org/en/packages/org.connectbot/

      https://github.com/connectbot/connectbot

    • degamad5 hours ago |parent

      Never used JuiceSSH or Termux, but I've been using Connectbot for years, and it's pretty good.

  • DeathArrow5 hours ago

    It's nice to see some good old fashioned cracking. It transports me 25 years back in IDA Pro days.

  • Banditoz3 hours ago

    Could this be considered grounds for a lawsuit?

  • PortableCode17 hours ago

    smali code is funny to read, basically an object-oriented assembly language (feels so wrong)

    • arendtio15 hours ago |parent

      Don't let Alan Kay[1] read that...

      [1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=alankay

  • gorkish12 hours ago

    Just a cynical observation here, but its funny how the author still hangs onto the notion that it is "the best" despite that it de facto cannot be "the best."

    Also, maybe dont rely on a poorly maintained app for making secure connections to your systems? Just me?

  • InMice10 hours ago

    I like Termius a lot better than JuiceSSH. Move on, you won't miss it.

  • stonecharioteeran hour ago

    Oh boy. I wanted to get a license for this. I waited for the price to drop, and now I'm glad I never did it.

  • anta407 hours ago

    I used the Pro version a few years ago. Now it's delisted from Play Store? Couldn't find it.

  • TheRoque10 hours ago

    I quickly dropped JuiceSSH when I discovered Termux. And I also find it way easier to use the way I want to, and flexible.

  • esseph16 hours ago

    Really great terminal app that I used in Android for a very long time with some interesting features.

    Also, Mosh shell support for sshing in degraded connection environments!

  • pelagicAustral17 hours ago

    > JuiceSSH used to be the best SSH client available on Android until December 2025.

    Really? I always gave that award to Termius, which is kind of my second best behind Servercat which I miss very dearly from the iOS environment.

    • Arrowmaster16 hours ago |parent

      One was a one time purchase, the other requires a subscription.... The answer should be clear.

      • anonova16 hours ago |parent

        Local-only usage of Termius is free and doesn't even require logging in to the service. I've been using it like this for years.

  • JorgeGT17 hours ago

    Damn. I especially liked the cloud backup & sync. Any good alternatives?

    • simlevesque17 hours ago |parent

      I'm using Termux with aliases. I'll write "c1" and it logs in the machine. I use git to sync and backup from my laptop.

      I bought JuiceSSH too but I didn't use it that much. It's a shame they did what they did.

      • mystifyingpoi16 hours ago |parent

        Termux is one of the best apps ever made for Android power users. It literally replaces so much stuff, if you don't care about GUI. No need for SSH app - it has ssh. No need for file sync app - there is rsync. No need for notetaking app, there is your $EDITOR you like. All 100% free. It's amazing.

        • epiccoleman16 hours ago |parent

          +1. Termux absolutely rules and makes the dream of a cyberdeck actually viable. I use it at least once a week for various homelab stuff.

          • wolvoleo10 hours ago |parent

            And with DeX it's like a +2 :)

      • Zenul_Abidin17 hours ago |parent

        I too bought JuiceSSH. I can still download and run it on other phones I get in the future, right?

        • muppetman16 hours ago |parent

          Cloud sync seems busted, so not really.

  • twosdai17 hours ago

    Wow nice work. Thanks for doing this and writing it up.

  • dstnn12 hours ago

    Same thing happened to me so I coded my own with claude instead of paying them again

    • netsharc11 hours ago |parent

      Next project: Claude-coded SSH server?

  • bakugo17 hours ago

    I just tried to purchase pro from within the app just to see what the price is, and the Google Play purchase popup tells me it's not available. Interesting.

  • nottorp14 hours ago

    I believe Google will cut off that avenue soon...

    • ilvez6 hours ago |parent

      I could not find JuiceSSH in Play store at this point anymore..

      • nottorp4 hours ago |parent

        I'm talking about sideloading. They announced they'll require something like Apple's notarization, it was posted on here a couple days ago.

  • muppetman16 hours ago

    Not trying to defend the developer here but they went really silent once before like this. Then came out of the gate with a bunch of updates and new features. I'm hoping they've just got really busy with life, I know when I emailed them before they have been responsive and helpful. I mean hell they might have died? Does the Store have a process for this? This app has been around a long time so I don't understand the rugpull comments. Also the syned keys are (supposedly, I guess we don't have the source) encrypted so even if the dev is no longer active that aspect should be secure I hope.

    My Pro features still seem to be working for me. EDIT: No, I see now that Cloud Sync isn't a thing anymore. Looks like it's really lost its backend servers.

    • josephcsible14 hours ago |parent

      > I don't understand the rugpull comments.

      The article says "the purchase made in 2019 is not recognized anymore". The seller unilaterally taking back something you previously bought, especially without a refund, is a rug pull.

      • bspammer12 hours ago |parent

        It still doesn't sound intentional to me. How many scammers are going around creating useful apps, supporting them, pushing out new features, and then finally doing the rugpull 14 years after release? It feels a lot more likely that the backend servers have fallen down on their own and for whatever reason there's no one around to fix them.

      • muppetman11 hours ago |parent

        A rugpull to me is something specifically setup to try and make money by scamming/rugpulling. JuiceSSH has been around for so long, even if it doesn't work anymore I don't feel rugpulled? If it was a year old I'd agree.

        • josephcsible11 hours ago |parent

          > If it was a year old I'd agree.

          If it were advertised at the time as a 1-year rental/subscription then it wouldn't be a rug pull. But the fact that it was advertised as a permanent purchase means that it is, no matter how long you got to use it before it was involuntarily taken back from you.

          • muppetman10 hours ago |parent

            Right but I still consider a rugpull to be a malicious/conscience activity to extract money from you. That doesn't seem the case here.

            • fenykep9 hours ago |parent

              I mean it seems like they have increased the price, locked previous lifetime purchases (which prompted some of the commenters here to purchase it again at the higher price) and many features (cloudsync, plugins) were killed. All without any communication or a platform for complaints.

              To me this fulfills your criteria. [edit] typo

  • FAFOAlex10 hours ago

    Never trust "app" devs. I paid for less than 1% of mine.

  • 1f60c16 hours ago

    This is pretty interesting but why not just pay the 20 bucks?

    • blibble16 hours ago |parent

      I would not use an SSH client written by someone that feels it's OK to break the terms of the contract this way

      who knows what's coming next?

      • user393938214 hours ago |parent

        The SSH deal has been altered. Pray I don’t alter it any further. csshck hoh.

    • __float16 hours ago |parent

      The second paragraph explains this: they already have paid, and some people have paid [again], but their purchase is not accepted.

    • dcdc12315 hours ago |parent

      The issue is people that already paid lost their pro features unless they pay _again_.

  • awill15 hours ago

    There are just fewer highly polished Android apps vs iOS apps, and that's why I switched to iOS.

    I bought JuiceSSH years ago on Android and it worked great, but I agree it's degraded, and I couldn't find an equivalent I liked.

    iOS has multiple apps that beat JuiceSSH. I use Termix and it's really, really good.