Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | yakattak's commentslogin

Honestly for such a powerful tool, it’s pretty damn janky. Permissions don’t always work, hitting escape doesn’t always register correctly, the formatting breaks on its own to name a few of the issues i’ve had. It’s popular and successful but it’s got lots of thorns

Crazy timing. My copy of this is being delivered today from the local bookshop. Great review.

I was wondering just yesterday if a model of “why waste time say lot word when few word do trick” would be easier on the tokens. I’ll have to give this a try lol

> No one has ever made a purchasing decision based on how good your code is.

If you have buggy software, people don’t use it if there are alternatives. They don’t care about the code but hard to maintain, buggy code will eventually translate to users trying other products.


Good code can also be buggy, bad code can be buggy.

The thing here was that if you have two boxes that take the same input and produce the same output at the same speed, do you care what the insides look like?

What if one is delivered in 4 days and the other in 30 days and costs more? Which one will you pick?


This has been the sentiment for nearly a decade now.

Much longer. We had VR in the '60s.

Steam works on the top 2 most played games on Steam right now.

Anecdotally I have not seen consistency in quality at all.


My chairs resemble each other. Have you tried ikea?

If you are talking about code which isn’t what I said, then we aren’t there yet.


It’s a bad analogy because the benefits of industrial machines were predictable processes done efficiently.


That came later than the beginning. Workhouses came before the loom. You can see this in the progression of quality of things like dinner plates over time.

Making clay pottery can be simple. But to make “fine china” with increasingly sophisticated ornamentation and strength became more complex over time. Now you can go to ikea and buy plates that would be considered expensive luxuries hundreds of years ago.


Yeah... nah. As others have said, your analogy does not hold up to scrutiny.


You’re not addressing any points I made.


I don’t love the original idea because uploading identification is risky. You could just plug AI into a verified account but at least the vector is a single account instead of unbounded.


Honestly the $10 barrier to SomethingAwful back in the day (and I guess now since it’s still around) definitely made a huge difference. I hate the idea of subscribing to a site like HN or Reddit… but one time $10 to post? I’d accept that if it meant less bots.


Odds are it would harm real discussions more than it would harm bot spam.

The bots exist for a reason, usually to covertly advertise a product, and by themselves already cost money to run. Someone looking to astroturf their AI B2B SaaS would probably be more willing to pay $10 to post than a random user from a less wealthy country who just wants to leave a comment on an interesting discussion.


A $10 one time not-an-asshole fee is totally reasonable.

History also shows you can take a $10 fee and maintain quality on SomethingAwful for quite some time.


I would probably not pay $10 to post on HN, but many spammers who expect some kind of tangible return would pay that, so the fee just makes the problem worse.


The spammers wouldn't pay it once though - the idea is that it's a good way to scale moderation. Each time an admin needs to ban a user there is a 10$ subsidy supporting that action - and if the bots come back then they get to pay 10$ to be banned again.

Assuming the money isn't wasted and is actually used to fund moderation 10$ is probably comfortably above the cost to detect and ban most malicious users.


The spammers wouldn't pay it once though

There are large swaths of spammers that indeed would not pay it. There are on the other hand plenty of NGO's that would pay it without a second thought to promote specific topics and dogpile on others. Those are the movements I would expect AI to take over if not already. AI does not sleep, humans do. AI won't miss the comments that groups believe need to be amplified or squelched.


That’s basically what Valve does on cheaters with premier accounts on cs:go/cs2. And the revenue still growing up.


Yeah, I love HN, but I wouldn't pay and I know many if not the majority of other people wouldn't. It would increase quality for awhile for sure, but what happens a year or two down the road? It would kill the user count and reduce comments and become less valuable over time.


I wonder how much that functions as an age gate since kids usually don't have credit cards?


Didn't that fee allowed to change account names of other users or something like that?


You could pay another $10 (or maybe $15?) to change someone else's avatar.


reminds me of Bill Gates in the 90s when asked about email spam. He said it would make sense to make an email cost like 1 cent so the spammers can't spam as much but this didn't sit right with the mindset of the people at the time.


Also, while real people probably would not be willing to pay to E-mail, spammers who are making money would pay and consider it a cost of doing business. So the fee is having the opposite of its intended effect.


I don't think the current firehose model of spam would be sustainable anymore, though. Those spammers send millions of mails a day. Even with a 1 cent cost, they'd have to be much more selective about their address lists, given the low success rate. It may not solve the problem but I'm almost sure it would help a little. It also may be an additional qualitative barrier for crime-linked spam such as phishing mails, because they'd have to try and find a non-traceable was of payment, which is not trivial and always carries a slight risk of being identified anyway.


Hashcash was a proof-of-work system that would have put a computational tax on email. I don't know what kept it from getting more traction other than simple chicken-and-egg network effects, but it's a good idea, and worth resurrecting.

http://www.hashcash.org


Email2000 is the only answer: https://cr.yp.to/im2000.html

TLDR: Mail storage is the sender's responsibility. The message isn't copied to the receiver. All the receiver needs is a brief notification that a message is available.


Sounds like a horrible system where you retain many of the problems of email (you still need to deliver notifications) and new surveillance and persistence and mutability problems layered on top..


We need something else, we need an "extreme" (~$1) fine that anyone can claim from any sender who bothered them, no questions asked. Spammers will stop instantly overnight. This would work for phone spam as well.


I read about an idea for an incentive/check system like that before. Something like: make the cost 10c instead of 1c, but implement a system where recipients can mark mails as confirmed "wanted" mail, upon which the sender would be reimbursed 9c. Increasing the cost for unsolicited mails while keeping the cost low for well-behaved newsletters.


community idea:

"my2cents"

0.02 to post or send a message


it's also something that was in my mind when i wrote about those two options. I still keep this idea in the back of my head since those days (i'm old enough to remember when gates had this atrocious, yet interesting idea).


payment would need a delay too. Pay $10 and then wait a week or so for the payment to clear without it being reversed. Hopefully that stops the card stealers from dumping as much as possible before getting booted.

Could we just add complex and varied captcha to the comment & posting forms?


That's not a bad idea, sending mail could simply be an authorization for a $1 or $10 charge. And if the receiver said the message was unwanted, then the charge would go through.

There's just the pesky problem of incentives on the other side of the coin - who gets the $? The spammee? But there would be enshitification issues like:

1. Those who are incentivized to take as big a cut as possible.

2. Those who would put it in their EULA that you must accept their spam and not chargeback or else you lose access to something you value like their services (EULA Ransom... not much different to today "accept our EULA or lose access to what you've already paid for!")

I'm sure there are many other perverse incentives which would creep in..


Now we could only pay $$ to overwrite people's social media pfps, now that'd be fun.


Given how easy it was to get banned, the :tenbux: were almost like a subscription.


It's a beautiful system. And if you were a dipshit and got banned, you paid another $10 and hopefully learned your lesson.


Exponential backoff: second time is $100 etc.


I think metafilter had a similar system and it was definitely one of the higher quality forums


They need to add “comprehensive tests” for Claude.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: