Dec 3, 2025 at 4:35 PM#6
The conflict of interest point is worth expanding on:
Janoshik's model: You pay, they test, they report. Simple. No relationship with vendors. No ratings to maintain. No database to monetize. The incentive structure is clean — their only product is accurate testing.
Finnrick's model: More complex. They offer free tests (funded how?), maintain vendor ratings (who decides the criteria?), and build a database (who has access?). They also offer paid consulting to vendors who want to improve their quality.
> When a testing service also consults for vendors, there's an inherent tension. Can they objectively rate a vendor they're also advising?
I want to be clear: I'm NOT saying Finnrick is compromised. I'm saying the business model has more potential pressure points than Janoshik's. Being aware of this isn't paranoia — it's good critical thinking.
The best approach: trust but verify. Use both services. Cross-reference results. If they consistently agree, both are reliable. If they diverge, investigate why.
38 12julia.endo, JessicaM_2024, TomFromTexas and 35 others
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