(no title)
Cort3z | 1 month ago
Possible solutions I can think of:
- Require an account with a paid service. Fix = require money - Require an account verified with real ID/passport etc. Fix = link to real person - Automated reply system to "waste tokens" if it is an AI that is responding. Fix is increased cost of spammer. - Have some kind of "vetting system" where you get on an allowed list to report these types of things. Seems not good to me, but perhaps there is something in it.
I wonder how much open source code is lost because maintainers must deal with this type of thing versus the "good" that AI can bring in productivity.
smsm42|1 month ago
Cort3z|1 month ago
I can imagine GitHub becoming this filter somehow
latexr|1 month ago
https://youtu.be/6n2eDcRjSsk?t=1664
pixl97|1 month ago
First requiring a deposit system. This might work in the sense that someone dedicated can put down $5 and report a bug, and even if it's not a bug but their work is legitimate they get refunded at the end of the process.
- This doesn't scale well globally as $5 is nothing to me, but significant to someone that lives in a place almost no one in the US can pronounce correctly.
- Once you become trusted you no longer need a deposit.
- Most people what would submit a single, real, bug won't do this and you lose this information.
- How is management of this deposit system paid for? How is fraud dealt with?
wt__|1 month ago
You could then build a reputation system, much like a spam blocklist, using some sort of hash of the payment details.