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Isn't that someone the person who created the PR? "Product Manager at @microsoft working on VS Code and GitHub Copilot!" it says on her profile

But only if you watched this 1 min Segment of today's sponsor...

Your free commit today is brought to you by duff beer


Microsoft already does this with their mobile Outlook. Sent by Outlook Android / iOS on the bottom of the message.

Huge difference: the commit signature may not have had anything to do with Copilot, whereas email sent by mobile Outlook was... sent by Outlook.

Nah, they are both unacceptable spam. Don't put words in my mouth and don't hijack my communication for marketing.

I was just pointing out there's a difference, not endorsing any of it.

Isn't he rage baiting? Now everyone talks about him again. Perfect for a narcissist.


Stop seeking ulterior motives. He's just an evil person.


Por qué no los dos?


Claro


His social media posts are very specifically designed to distract and pack the news cycle full of garbage, drowning out what actually matters. His entire life, his main defense to anything has been to attack and distract.

His posting style is also very typical of facist governments.

His approval rating is the worst of any president since WW2, including his first term, which was the previous 'record holder.' The Iran war is deeply unpopular with the American people, the skyrocketing gas and diesel prices are infuriating many. He's desperate to shift attention.


I don't think they're "very specifically designed" to do that, I think that's just how he is, raw and unfiltered. He was a shitposter on Twitter too, that's why he was banned.


>The Iran war is deeply unpopular with the American people

I heard it was popular with Republicans.

Also, the Democratic party establishment seems pretty mum on this war so far. They are full of neocons too.


It's not.


This is one of the main reasons I prefer to use openrouter instead. It's prepaid.


I also use it, but I would not call it light and fast.


And yet it was OnlyOffice that enabled me to get rid of MS Office and finally switch to Linux fully.


Compared to the heavily subsidized subscriptions, I don't think API is sold at loss.

Also why would you create a throwaway for this question? Are you trying to rage bait?


> Also why would you create a throwaway for this question? Are you trying to rage bait?

You should never question anyone's route to privacy :)


> Are you trying to rage bait?

If you have to ask, it's probably not rage bait. I'm just too lazy to come up with a username.


Does it end every prompt output with "God bless America "?


If you want me to read your comment, please pay me $1 first... if I find your comment interesting I might refund.


I had this idea / pet project once where I did exactly this for email. Emails would immediately bounce with payment link and explanation. If you paid you get credit on a ledger per email address. Only then the mail goes through.

You can also integrate it in clients by adding payment/reward claim headers.


Bill Gates already had this idea. All efforts to change email were already documented 25 years ago. The biggest changes are it is more centralized these days, SPF/DKIM/DMARC, JMAP innovation, oh... and one more thing! It is HUGE!! HTML email is the default...


Yeah I remember this from "The Road Ahead" which I chanced upon one time in the 90s. I thought it was a silly idea.


Scammers (and spammers) always got $1! That's why there's a lot of the scam ads on google, fb, apple.

So the paywall email firewall will not work as desired.


Not many email attacks are worth an entire dollar. It would be very very effective at reducing spam. And too effective at reducing everything else.


Emails to CEOs they do worth.


So only CEOs will get spam, and it's effective for 99.9% of people? I would not describe that as "will not work as desired".


And it would even still work for the CEO, they would just have to charge more than $1.

The real problem is we don't have a low-friction digital payment system that allows individuals to automate sending payment requests for small amounts of money to each other without requiring everyone to sign up for a merchant account with a financial bureaucracy.


> The real problem is we don't have a low-friction digital payment system that allows individuals to automate sending payment requests for small amounts of money to each other without requiring everyone to sign up for a merchant account with a financial bureaucracy.

Its called cryptocurrency


First you have to make it low-friction. If I want Joe Average to send me $1 in cryptocurrency, how is he getting $1 in cryptocurrency to send me?


>First you have to make it low-friction. If I want Joe Average to send me $1 in cryptocurrency, how is he getting $1 in cryptocurrency to send me?

Absolutely. You're 1000% correct. Cryptocurrency is way too high friction for stuff like that. When I wish to spend crypto, I need to:

[If you don't have an exchange account already, you'll need the 0.x steps too!]

0.0 Create an account on an exchange which is legally allowed to operate in your state/country;

0.1 Provide all sorts of KYC/AML info including photos of yourself and your government ID;

0.2 Wait hours/days/weeks for the exchange to "validate" your KYC/AML info and allow you to purchase crypto;

1. Log in to an exchange which is actually allowed to operate in the place where one resides;

2. Purchase Bitcoin or other coin the exchange deems appropriate (leaving aside the hefty fee charged for using fiat currency/traditional credit card);

3. Wait days/weeks until the exchange allows you to transfer the purchased cryptocurrency out of your exchange-hosted wallet;

4. Transfer crypto to a wallet you actually control;

5. Convert the crypto purchased on the exchange to the crypto coin required for whatever your purpose may be;

6. Transmit the crypto to the destination wallet.

Total time (not including setting up the exchange account, which can take anywhere from 1-10 days): 3-10 days.

Much too high friction for small payments, IMHO.


All the setup is no worse than setting up a bank account

And technically it can be avoided through back channels if you know someone who already has it - can just pay them cash or whatever and they can send crypto to you

Crypto is very easy to transfer once you have a wallet

Its the exchange to/from real world currency where the friction is.


> All the setup is no worse than setting up a bank account

Which is a huge pain in the butt. If someone invented a new lower-spam email ecosystem that required everyone to make a new bank account, very few people would join.

I would say something about a combined account but many countries have already figured out free bank transfers without needing crypto so maybe do that?


Sorry for the late reply.

You're correct, as far as it goes.

However, we weren't talking about using cryptocurrency in general, but in a very specific way: Making micropayments to devs as a mechanism to limit AI slop PRs to open source projects.

Doing that effectively would require broad implementation of some sort of payment scheme.

Given the current (as I documented) hoops one needs to jump through to obtain cryptocurrency if one doesn't have any, especially just for a random user to get crypto to send $1 to a github repo with their PR makes exactly zero sense.

Yes. Buying drugs and other stuff outside of the mainstream economy is definitely worth the effort. To send $1/PR for escrow to limit spam? Not so much.


There is no shortage of apps to do that these days. Venmo and CashApp are pretty mainstream for people in the US.


I'll better keep the $1 to myself than go through the crazy 35 steps KYC onboarding form just to send that $1.


The market currently values your reading of HN comments at $0.


I'm sure astroturfers value it more highly than that.


The only way for you to be sure of that is if you're one.


I'm sure there's literature out there on how much astroturfers are paid.


Who's hit with the transaction fees though?


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