Edit: I think CodingCupboard is nice idea, don't get me wrong, and in your first week you've got a mention on TechCrunch (startup dream, as you wrote).
Can you explain how it happened?
Good exposure though, just maybe not to the right audience.
- you might want to mention more clearly that current posting projects is free
- Do you need to ask for address details just to post a project? I can understand when it comes to billing, but it initially put me off just to post a free project.
- You ask for a budget but i'm looking for someone for ongoing work, perhaps make this optional? I had to enter £0 to proceed
- the text boxes aren't resizable (FF mac) so its hard to re-read what you've just entered
Good luck and looking forward to some responses to my listing
Then I would suggest you to look out to the opposite problem, denial of service via long passwords (assuming that you correctly use a slow key derivation function).
e.g. Django now accept passwords with at most 4096 bytes because attackers used gigantic passwords that took a long time to hash
Few questions: How much time did it take you to build this? Is this an evening project? It costs £25 to list and £100 to award a project, am I getting this right? How do you select your coders? Why did you choose such saturated market, in a way at least? I do believe there is always room for more, just wondering.
Is anyone going after the high end? Recruiting companies I've seen are a bit lacking in innovation.