I didn’t say it lacked ethics, I said I expected it to be driven by ethics. There’s a world of difference. I just mean it initially sounded like this was a protest project “for the people”, done in a way to take back power from big corporations, and was saddened to see it’s another generic commercial endeavour.
> People are allowed to make money with their work.
Which is why I said it’s their prerogative.
If you’re going to reply, please strive to address the points made, what was said, not what you imagine the other person said. Don’t default to thinking the other person is being dismissive or malicious.
I’ve read the parent post above and looked at the website and see nothing that would make me think it’s a “protest for the people”.
It just seems a little strange when you then go on to say “strive to address… what was said, not what you imagine the other person said”.
- 'I created a similar website', so it compares to https://pricewatcher.gr/en/.
- a big part of the discussion is in the context of inflation and price gouging
- pricewatcher presents its data publicly for all consumers to see and use, it is clearly intended as a tool for consumers to combat price gouging strategies
- 'pricewatcher.gr is an independent site which is not endorsed by any shop', nothing suggests this website is making money off consumers
- the 'similar website' however is offering exclusive access to data to businesses, at a price, in order for those business to undercut the competition and become more profitable
So the goals are almost opposite. One is to help consumers combat price gouging of supermarkets, the other is to help supermarkets become (even) more profitable. It is similar in the sense that it is also scraping data, but it's not strange to think being similar would mean they would have the same goal, which they don't.
See the sibling reply by another user, which I think explains it perfectly.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41179628
> It just seems a little strange when you then go on to say “strive to address… what was said, not what you imagine the other person said”.
It’s not strange at all if you pay attention to the words. I did not mischaracterise the author or their goals, I explained what I expected and what I felt regarding what I experienced reading the post and then the website.
In other words, I’m not attacking or criticising the author. I’m offering one data point, one description of an outside view which they’re free to ignore or think about. That’s it.
Don’t take every reply as an explicit agreement or disagreement. Points can be nuanced, you just have to make a genuine effort to understand. Default to not assuming the other person is a complete dolt. Or don’t. It’s also anyone’s prerogative to be immediately reactive. That’s becoming ever more prevalent (online and offline), and in my view it’s a negative way to live.