Thanks for all the comments so far. I wanted to share what I am taking from the discussion and also open the door if anyone wants to keep pushing on any of these points. There is a lot of useful input here.
About the $2.99 plan.
Several people pointed out that the pricing feels too low or too open ended. That is fair. I priced it that way for launch, but I am going to adjust it with a clearer fair use limit and a slightly higher base price. If anyone has strong opinions on what feels reasonable for small sites while still being safe for me, I would love to hear it.
Who the plugin is actually for.
A few replies assumed this is mainly for people who already use Cloudflare DNS. The real target is the group that cannot or do not want to move their nameservers, but still want Cloudflare-level delivery. If anyone here has seen this pattern with clients or non-technical users, I am curious how common that is in your experience.
Privacy wording.
Some comments pointed out that my privacy section could be clearer about what Cloudflare logs. I agree. The plugin itself does not track anything, but Cloudflare obviously logs what any CDN logs. I will rewrite that part. If there is better wording that avoids confusion, I am open to suggestions.
Why use a Worker at all.
This is not an offloader, although that's a good plug in on itself. I saw a few questions about why not rely entirely on Cloudflare’s built in caching. The Worker is mainly there to keep all Cloudflare setup outside of WordPress and avoid credential handling inside the plugin. If anyone sees a simpler pattern that avoids that overhead, I would like to hear it.
Content and responsibility.
The point about hosting other peoples images under my own domain is valid. I am adding more safeguards and encouraging bigger sites to self host their Worker. If you have experience dealing with this at scale, any advice is welcome.
Overall this thread has been helpful. There are still a few open questions and I am happy to keep the conversation going if anyone wants to dig deeper into pricing, edge behavior, privacy, or Cloudflare alternatives.
About the $2.99 plan. Several people pointed out that the pricing feels too low or too open ended. That is fair. I priced it that way for launch, but I am going to adjust it with a clearer fair use limit and a slightly higher base price. If anyone has strong opinions on what feels reasonable for small sites while still being safe for me, I would love to hear it.
Who the plugin is actually for. A few replies assumed this is mainly for people who already use Cloudflare DNS. The real target is the group that cannot or do not want to move their nameservers, but still want Cloudflare-level delivery. If anyone here has seen this pattern with clients or non-technical users, I am curious how common that is in your experience.
Privacy wording. Some comments pointed out that my privacy section could be clearer about what Cloudflare logs. I agree. The plugin itself does not track anything, but Cloudflare obviously logs what any CDN logs. I will rewrite that part. If there is better wording that avoids confusion, I am open to suggestions.
Why use a Worker at all. This is not an offloader, although that's a good plug in on itself. I saw a few questions about why not rely entirely on Cloudflare’s built in caching. The Worker is mainly there to keep all Cloudflare setup outside of WordPress and avoid credential handling inside the plugin. If anyone sees a simpler pattern that avoids that overhead, I would like to hear it.
Content and responsibility. The point about hosting other peoples images under my own domain is valid. I am adding more safeguards and encouraging bigger sites to self host their Worker. If you have experience dealing with this at scale, any advice is welcome.
Overall this thread has been helpful. There are still a few open questions and I am happy to keep the conversation going if anyone wants to dig deeper into pricing, edge behavior, privacy, or Cloudflare alternatives.