this post was submitted on 21 Dec 2024
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Keep in mind that the instructions are written by those who wish to extract money from you.
It's not like they're stealing it. They're just guiding you on how to use detergent.
It's like saying the people who make microwavable popcorn are extracting money from me because they struggle to take into consideration how the microwave works.
But they're incentivised to tell you to use more detergent even if you don't need to, leading you to needlessly spend more money.
You say that like that confirms their intentions or that detergent volume would ever be seen as a universal rule anyways. It's so circumstantial it challenges the point.
If (hypothetically) they specifically guide you to use more than necessary, thus wasting detergent, theyre making you spend more money on their product, thus extracting money from you.
Microwave popcorn isn't a reasonable analogue because you don't "use more product" following their instructions. Maybe hot chocolate is a good example? Every package I've bought has suggested using basically 2x as much as I find I need to make a mug of it.
Unless trial and error come into play, which is why I brought up popcorn. I honestly wonder how many of those complaining about this actually do laundry. Too much detergent ends up making the clothes seem like they went through a car wash, so if too much was being used, it's not like the person wouldn't know. There also aren't as many hard rules about it as people think there are to base the idea of some of the purportedly "wrong" specifications on.