Comment by jm4
21 hours ago
Am I the only one around here who’s sick and tired of the bitching and moaning on every post about how something was vibe coded or written by AI? Without fail, someone complains and it shoots up to the top of the comments. It’s gotten ridiculous and it’s off topic.
The easiest thing for you to do is just not engage with the post if you don’t like it. You people don’t need to pollute the comment section for anyone else who’s actually interested.
Just about everything is vibe coded or written with AI these days. Assume that’s the default. Comments pointing it out or complaining about it is just noise.
> Just about everything is vibe coded or written with AI these days.
And I’m supposed to just accept this? The fact that this is the case sucks. Don’t tell me to stop complaining about it. Just because you don’t have standards or have given up on trying to make things better doesn’t mean the rest of us have.
Plus, it takes up a slot on the front page that could be taken up by something worth reading.
It seems like everyone is more worried about how something was made rather than what it is or whether or not the work is good on its own merit. Ironic from a group that is surely using AI tools in their own work.
How it is made is often a strong indicator of whether or not the work is good.
You don't find many literary masterpieces scrawled in permanent market on a toilet wall.
"...on the subway wall." - Paul Simon
But you do find plenty of dubious traits in the authors (both the toilet scrawlers and the literary gods).
They are not in the website business though.
1 reply →
I too find "looks written by AI" comments tedious. I feel that the following guideline [0] actually covers this, perhaps it should be updated to also specifically mention "AI written":
> Please don't complain about tangential annoyances—e.g. article or website formats, name collisions, or back-button breakage. They're too common to be interesting.
[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html#comments
I'm confused by your response. I was trying to understand if the product and the company are real. An AI-generated website is not a positive signal. Neither is the lack of any product photos. And if you go to Wikipedia, you'll learn that the REO Motor Car Company went defunct in 1967, with no mention of any revival.
So my first thought was that it might be a subtle troll or a hoax. I did a bit more research and found the links to trade articles. It's not a dig at AI. And TBH, I'm sure that LLM's feelings weren't hurt.
Vibecoding your whole website is an indication of how seriously you’re taking a project. With how new this company is and how clearly this whole website was made with AI, how can you trust a single thing this website says about a product that barely exists? The AI probably just invented half of it
Worse than vibe coding is vibe copywriting—and it appears to have that in spades. I have a really hard time taking something seriously that reads like it came straight out of Claude Code without even a minimal editing pass.
I hope it's legit, though, and that they succeed! I'd love to buy a product like they're planning to build.
Damn you, company who isn't making websites for a living, where are your priorities!?
Well when you don't even have a product to sell yet the website is the second most important part, right after actually making the thing. The website is there to sell preorders
You could have simply just not engaged…? It’s no different. You’re doing a similar pollution!
The lack of self-awareness is baffling.
There is something to be said about this particular style of argument, as it's akin to the "paradox of tolerance".
Ultimately I think the most fair thing is to let both sides attempt to build support until a clear victor emerges.