Your thoughts are purely from the perspective of a person who can earn 7/hour, and which has Mcdonalds behind every corner. What about the countries where people work for less then 10$ per month (hard work), unemployment is high and it is difficult to find a job? In some cases users of faucets can maybe ( or maybe not), earn 1$ per day = 30$ per month - for you this is something like pocket money, but for some others this money means much more than anyone else can imagine.
Some examples :
- Bangladesh - 19$ -68$ per month
- Democratic Republic of the Congo - 1.83$ per day
- Kazakhstan - 78$ per month
- Sierra Leone - 57$ per month
- Venezuela - 1.83$-7.98$ per month
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_minimum_wages_by_countryThese are just some examples of poor countries, and there are plenty of them where people live with very modest incomes. I am in faucets world for years, so I know some facts and I am in contact with many faucet users. This is not something that can make person rich, except for some faucet owners/related services - but for some people this is good start to get some coins if they have no other way to do that.
Its true, I live in Cuba and feel lucky if you can earn more then 50$ in a month in a normal job here, although food is very cheap and other things are cheap too, technological stuff are insanely expensive and we don't have at this time in history any way to convert cash into any kind of electronic money like put it in a credit o debit card and use it to e-shopping (the cards exist but they are only valid inside the country). I don't know many people involve with crypto here, maybe because the internet is very expensive too (1$=1hour), so in my point of view a faucet its a nice way to earn at least something.