10 comments

  • loloquwowndueo 42 minutes ago
    AI contributions to projects that aren’t your own are pointless. We all have access to the same models so you’re not doing anyone any favors by adding layers of noise. If the project maintainers want to tackle an issue that matters to you, they are in a far better position to craft a suitable prompt and review the changes than a rando over the internet with a Claude account.
    • thrill 1 minute ago
      That's kind of like saying no one should participate in Kaggle contests because we all have access to the same datasets.
    • koolba 32 minutes ago
      One step below that is AI reviews of PRs, copy pasted verbatim without even reading it.
  • adastra22 1 hour ago
    The lack of self awareness is shocking. This is a tragedy of the commons and they don’t even realize it. The whole thing was written by AI, so maybe not that surprising.
    • ryandrake 43 minutes ago
      Typical tech/business bro mentality: no discussion at all about whether they should be doing it. Just: what can be done profitably and without getting your account banned? I almost envy them: No ethical voice tapping on your shoulder warning you to not be a jerk. Must be blissful!
  • krazydad 1 hour ago
    Meanwhile, several companies are no longer offering bounties. It's becoming tedious to sift through all the AI-generated submissions, many of which are false positives.
    • alexboehm 1 hour ago
      I think this period of false positives is ending, https://daniel.haxx.se/blog/2026/04/22/high-quality-chaos/ that's according to the curl maintainer that initially blew the lid on the false positives problem.
      • londons_explore 53 minutes ago
        Better models are better.

        But smaller and cheaper models which produce more junk are cheaper.

        The cost is with the project maintainer, not with the bounty hunter.

    • zrm 1 hour ago
      Just require people submitting a bounty to post an evaluation fee. If it's a real bug they get a refund and the bounty. If it's AI slop, you keep the evaluation fee.
      • Salgat 41 minutes ago
        This might work but only if the evaluations are done through a trusted third party entity where none of the money ever reaches the company you're submitting to.
      • irjustin 1 hour ago
        > If it's AI slop, you keep the evaluation fee.

        The number of problems this creates absolutely isn't worth it.

        You've traded higher barrier of entry for a PR nightmare when someone publicly complains that you ate their legit submission fee as a money grabber.

        • zrm 58 minutes ago
          Bounties already have that whenever you reject one for being nothing.
  • jazzyjackson 10 minutes ago
    I actually wouldn’t mind putting prices on tasks and letting other people spend tokens trying to meet the criteria, bounty goes to the first bidder that actually solves the problem.
  • pdimitar 23 minutes ago
    I'd have sympathy if:

    - This was not mostly (if not fully) an AI-generated text; - Had a clear problem statement. Why would you burn money on $17 - $50 bounties? In the hopes that you'd collect $30 at $5.68 spend? You can literally offer your services to carry boxes for a higher hourly rate.

    Low-effort post.

  • david_shi 1 hour ago
    Bounties are the most overfished pond when trying to making money with AI because the task to earnings step is atomic.

    AI UGC with affiliate sales and other kinds of monetized AI content creation requires niche selection, monitoring, and some upfront risk, but has much better ROI on effort.

  • neom 55 minutes ago
    "Pick one repo and become a contributor first", add the operative "real" after a, and this should probably be the one and only point under "What I'd do differently"
  • FergusArgyll 1 hour ago
  • stalfosknight 38 minutes ago
    Why are you so shameless?