334 pointsby miki1232117 hours ago33 comments
  • martinwoodward4 hours ago
    Martin from GitHub here. This type of behaviour is explicitly against the GitHub terms of service, when we catch the accounts doing this we can (and do) take action against those accounts including banning the accounts. It's a game of whack-a-mole for sure, and it's not just start-ups that take part in this sketchy behaviour to be honest. I've been plenty of examples in my time across the board.

    The fundamental nature of Git makes this pretty easy for folks to scrape data from open source repositories. It's against our terms of service and those folks might want to talk with some lawyers about doing it - but as every Git commit contains your name and email address in the commit data it's not technically difficult even if it is unethical.

    From the early days we've added features to help users anonymise their email addresses for commits posted to GitHub. Basically, you configure your local Git client to use your 'no-reply' email address in commits and that still links back to your GitHub account when you push: https://docs.github.com/en/account-and-profile/reference/ema...

    I think that's still probably the best route. We want to keep open source data as open as possible, so I don't think locking down API's etc is the right route. We do throttle API requests and scraping traffic, but then again there have been plenty of posts here over the years from people annoyed at hitting those limits so it's definitely a balancing act. Love to know what folks here think though.

    • retlehs25 minutes ago
      I’ve made over five reports for this exact spam scenario, and never once have y’all acted on them. I have a hard time believing you ban spam accounts that clearly violate your ToS.

      I even wrote about a specific example of a YC company spamming me from my GitHub email at https://benword.com/dont-tolerate-unsolicited-spam

      • eli22 minutes ago
        How would you know whether the account that did the scraping was banned?
        • retlehs19 minutes ago
          By visiting the account and noticing that it still has activity long after the report.
    • koito172 hours ago
      I don't have any specific suggestions, but I do want to give thanks for implementing functionality to block pushes if the email field is *not* using an anonymized mail address.

      It's one thing to offer anonymous e-mail addresses, but it's also awesome that GitHub can help prevent mistakes that would otherwise leak a user's e-mail address. I am not sure how many people try to be privacy conscious on GitHub, but I assume most users don't, so it's nice seeing this little feature exist.

    • ayhanfuat4 hours ago
      I am also getting constant spam because apparently they can see who starred a repo (i.e. I see you starred repo x and we are doing something similar). I am not starring anything anymore.
    • danesparza2 hours ago
      I didn't realize this was against the Github TOS - I just thought it was par for the course for recruiters nowadays. This is good to know!

      How do I report that person, though? Your support page about reporting abuse assumes I know the person's Github account: https://docs.github.com/en/communities/maintaining-your-safe...

    • skwashd2 hours ago
      I know it is against the ToS. I've reported multiple organisations doing this. Last time I reported one, support closed the ticket saying the activity is off platform so they can't do anything.
    • TheSaifurRahman2 hours ago
      Are no-reply emails associated with the accounts if the username is changed? That's one reason why I switched back to my personal email.
    • AznHisoka4 hours ago
      Maybe I am missing something, but can’t you simply not show the email address in a git commit? (Sincere question, not saying this is trivial. i am dumb and like to ask dumb questions even if might be embarassing)

      If someone wants to message someone, it goes through github notifications or github emails them

      Also banning an account doesnt seem like a heavy punishment, given they can simply move to gitlab, bitbucket etc

      • EdNutting3 hours ago
        That would be a fundamental change to how Git works, not just GitHub. Even if the web UI didn't show it, a simple `git log` would reveal it.

        You can mask your email address in git commits but a lot of open source projects won't accept that. And some pseudo-open-source ones insist on sending you an email to authenticate before they'll give you access to the GitHub repo (looking at you Unreal Engine!)

        So, no, I don't think they could simply "not show the email address".

        • AznHisoka3 hours ago
          Makes sens! Appreciate the explanation!
      • easton3 hours ago
        Git commits have a email address as a required field[0], although some people put something bogus in there. And then it's in the data provided when you clone the repo onto your machine even if you aren't using the GitHub APIs.

        To his point, you can set that to the no-reply email address GitHub gives you if you don't want mail but do want the commit to be linked to your GitHub account.

        [0]: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-commit#_commit_information

    • ericol3 hours ago
      I've had more than a few instances of this over the past 2 years, and my reply is exactly the above.

      "What you are doing is against Github's TOS"

    • trympet2 hours ago
      Nice, thank you Martin. How do you punish the fraudsters? Do you send them to prison over CFAA violation terms of service?
      • martinwoodward12 minutes ago
        I kinda wish I had that much power. There would certainly be less people in the world listening to their phones without headphones..

        Usually starts with contacting them over email reminding them of the terms of service and warning them to stop. Then their account might get deactivated and they need to write and promise to not be naughty again. If they ignore that then the account gets removed.

        There are a bunch of automated checks that are running all the time as well and will take automated action that then gets later reviewed by humans. At lot of times the process is fast-tracked.

        The off-platform 'let's scrape a bunch of data and then spam nice people' is the hardest to police. Linking those mails to an offending GitHub account is hard and very manual, also anyone can send emails saying they are someone they are not and because of that anyone can deny they sent the mail and they'll usually blame a rogue agency they where working with etc.

        I probably shouldn't say it, but the public shame that comes from being mentioned on social, in hacker news etc. That stops people who want to be treated as legitimate from doing that sort of thing and helps educate the wider community around what is and isn't acceptable behaviour - that is why it's good to see this thread and see the issue getting attention.

      • nerdsniper19 minutes ago
        > CFAA violation terms of service

        This would be a gross miscarriage of justice and bringing successful action under this theory would do widespread harm by expanding the definition of the CFAA.

        Just because a company can take some nuclear action, doesn't mean they should.

      • skeptic_aian hour ago
        Will send a strong email: Don’t do bad things.
  • scottydelta3 hours ago
    YC is a proud investor in Flock, what YC Ethics thing are you talking about?
    • cassonmars3 hours ago
      And Cluely
      • tasn3 hours ago
        Cluely is not YC.
    • ls-a3 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • shrubble2 hours ago
        How would that even be legal? (Although I can't find such a startup with any kind of search engine)
        • akerl_2 hours ago
          Why would it be illegal?
          • john_strinlaian hour ago
            i am not sure of anywhere it is illegal.

            but areas i am familiar with can consider a negative reference to be defamation, thus anyone providing a negative reference should only do so if they are able to defend it (i.e. prove their statement is substantially true, or prove that the statement was honestly believed to be true and published with no malice or reckless disregard).

            seems risky, at least, to build a whole business around negative references that could potentially cross the line into defamation. but that type of thinking is probably why i am not rich.

            • nerdsniperan hour ago
              There are many definitions of illegal (criminal, civil, regulatory, the much much looser “license to operate” as used in chemical industry, etc).

              A blacklist seems dubious. I’d advise the founders to get counsel on their obligations under the FCRA, which they may be construed to be regulated by.

              That said, I believe "Bad News" is an AI hallucination. The most similar company I can find historical news is "Peeple"[0], which was not funded by YC. YCombinator's only known association with a blacklist that I can find was a blacklist of VC's that were accused of harassing female founders[1].

              0: https://archive.is/r9UQo

              1: https://archive.is/17Ans

              • john_strinlaian hour ago
                >There are many definitions of illegal (criminal, civil, regulatory, the much much looser “license to operate” as used in chemical industry, etc).

                yes, but i am not sure why this matters here. i am not aware of negative references, in general, being illegal under any of those definitions of illegal.

                no one would say regular speech is illegal just because it can be subject to a defamation lawsuit. same logic.

                but i agree, if it is a real business, it seems exceptionally risky.

                • nerdsniper23 minutes ago
                  https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/15/1681d

                  It's more than just "subject to a defamation lawsuit" (including class action lawsuits). Although for me, even if it were "just that", I'd still call it "potentially illegal". Rather, they'd potentially face FTC penalties and CFPB enforcement actions under 15 U.S.C. section 1681d(a), (b).

                  This law would likely classify such a company as falling under laws pertaining to "investigative consumer reports" under FCRA. This is any report on someone's "character, general reputation, personal characteristics, and mode of living" used for the purposes of employment, loans, housing, etc.

                  > A consumer reporting agency shall not prepare or furnish an investigative consumer report on a consumer that contains information that is adverse to the interest of the consumer and that is obtained through a personal interview with a neighbor, friend, or associate of the consumer or with another person with whom the consumer is acquainted or who has knowledge of such item of information, unless—

                  > (A) the agency has followed reasonable procedures to obtain confirmation of the information, from an additional source that has independent and direct knowledge of the information; or

                  > (B) the person interviewed is the best possible source of the information.

                  They'd find themselves subject to legal penalties under:

                  FCRA Willful Noncompliance (15 U.S. Code § 1681n) (if they did not disclose their existence/use/content of reports to employment candidates)

                  FCRA Negligent Noncompliance (15 U.S. Code § 1681o) (if they made somewhat reasonable but insufficient efforts to comply with the FCRA)

                  or

                  Administrative Enforcement (15 U.S. Code § 1681s)

                  and be subject to fines up to $4,700 per violation plus actual damages, plus punitive damages, plus legal fees. State Attorneys General can also bring FCRA lawsuits on behalf of their constituents, not just the federal government. FTC / CFPB can name the founders individually in the lawsuits, not just their corporate entity, and ban[1][2] them from operating any similar businesses in the future.

                  That all said, to some extent, YCombinator partners are on the record[3] supporting the idea of their startups sometimes doing illegal things. Generally they'll frame this as challenging outdated regulations, but they acknowledge that the founders whose strategies they fully support sometimes come into office hours and discuss how they're worried that the strategy puts them at risk of going to jail.

                  0: https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/15/1681d

                  1: FTC v MyLife.com, Inc., and Jeffrey Tinsley (CEO): https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2021/12/...

                  2: https://www.ftc.gov/legal-library/browse/cases-proceedings/b...

                  3: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hm-ZIiwiN1o&t=8m46s

                  • john_strinlai13 minutes ago
                    ah, okay. so the hypothetical company may potentially be doing something illegal (the "investigative consumer report" part). good to know! that makes sense, and i was unaware of that.

                    i stand corrected in the hypothetical "bad reference aggregator company" scenario.

                    >YCombinator partners are on the record[3] supporting the idea of their startups sometimes doing illegal things.

                    interesting, thanks for surfacing that up! i wont pretend to be surprised, though.

              • an hour ago
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            • drcongoan hour ago
              It's definitely illegal in the UK.
              • john_strinlaian hour ago
                i dont believe that it is illegal to provide a negative reference in the UK, as long as it is honest, factual, and provided in good faith.

                from gov.uk:

                >"If you think you’ve been given an unfair or misleading reference, you may be able to claim damages in court. Your previous employer must be able to back up the reference, such as by supplying examples of warning letters.

                You must be able to show that:

                - it’s misleading or inaccurate

                -you ‘suffered a loss’ – for example, the withdrawal of a job offer"

                which means, if the reference is not misleading and not inaccurate, a negative reference is ok. other uk-based law firms (from a quick google) agree with this interpretation.

                • laserlight26 minutes ago
                  Providing a negative reference is totally different than gathering negative references and selling them. The former could be legal while the latter could be illegal.
                  • john_strinlai11 minutes ago
                    for sure!

                    in my comment, i was speaking more generally than i should have, and that (obviously, in hindsight) caused some confusion between the specific case of the hypothetical company, and the general case of an employer providing a negative reference. my bad -- and it is too late to edit to provide clarification.

      • k33n2 hours ago
        I can't find any website for it. Are you sure it's not just some posting category on Bookface, YC's internal social network?
        • vunderba24 minutes ago
          Same. While it doesn't help that their name is about as generic as it gets, I searched across Kagi, Google, etc. and couldn't find any such YC company.

          That being said, it wouldn't entirely surprise me if somebody's tried to start the tech equivalent of the casino "Black Book".

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Book_(gambling)

        • ls-a2 hours ago
          According to chatgpt there was backlash and the startup renamed itself. I remember when i saw it in YC's startup list a few years ago it seemed stealthy (no website etc.)
          • tptacekan hour ago
            GPT:

            There are some mentions online of a Y Combinator startup called Bad News, but nothing official or well-documented shows up in public YC lists or press — at least as of the latest searchable sources.

            The only place it’s referenced is in a Hacker News thread where someone claimed there was a YC company whose product was a blacklist of employees so other startups wouldn’t hire them, and they said the name was Bad News. But people in that thread couldn’t find any evidence of it, and there aren’t real search results tying that name to an official YC company on YC’s site, their startup directory, or mainstream reports.

          • BigTTYGothGFan hour ago
            > According to chatgpt

            Oh come on.

            • ls-aan hour ago
              I think you missed the second part where I saw it in the YC startup list with a description of what it does and who the founders were. But since it disappeared I had to ask chatgpt what happened. You can ask chatgpt as well there is nothing wrong with that
              • weird-eye-issuean hour ago
                Ask it about what it might have hallucinated to help it hallucinate more?
          • hypeatei42 minutes ago
            Why are you obfuscating so much and telling people to use ChatGPT? How hard would it be to paste what they renamed to and/or the founders' names?
            • ls-a39 minutes ago
              I'm not that interested really in putting that much effort. Take it or leave it
  • keiferski3 hours ago
    I've spent a lot of my career marketing to developers, and spamming their GitHub account might be top 1 or 2 worst marketing tactics you can use.

    Cold emailing rarely works by itself. Cold emailing developers via emails you pulled from their GitHub accounts? At that point, you're actively harming your brand, and may as well just send them spam diet pill ads.

  • unfuncoan hour ago
    I also had unsolicited spam from Vincent Jiang of Aden, another YC company.

        Hi Daniel,
    
        I just came across your profile on social media and wondered if you'd be interested in joining our Discord community for AI agent development. Currently, we see that agents break, loop, get lost, hallucinate, and cost a fortune, and therefore built a space where developers can share challenges and insights.
    • foldr39 minutes ago
      I had a similar one from that guy asking me to make open source PRs to some repo of theirs for, err, $25-50/hour. I replied explaining that senior software engineers in the UK aren’t quite as desperately poor as that, and got a canned response saying that they were looking forward to reviewing my PRs :D
  • cyannan hour ago
    Got this spam today on my GitHub address, YC affiliated:

    From: henry@joincactuscompute.com

    Hey,

    I hope all is well with you, just reaching out as you seem to be interested in on-device speech models.

    Cactus is a low-latency AI engine for consumer devices like phones, Macs, wearables, Raspberry Pis, etc.

    We support transcription models like Whisper & Parakeet, benchmarks available in the attached GitHub repo.

    GitHub: https://github.com/cactus-compute/cactus

    We are keen to get your feedback, and star if feeling generous.

    Thanks a million

  • armchairhacker5 hours ago
    I remember this being discussed a while ago

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9332418 (11 years ago)

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20660624 (7 years ago)

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27855152 (5 years ago)

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30900237 (4 years ago)

    Seems it’s a reoccurring issue

  • dewey4 hours ago
    This happens all the time, not really surprised as the GitHub API makes it pretty easy to extract valuable leads with real and confirmed email addresses.
    • tommoor4 hours ago
      Yea, been going on at least a decade
  • kristoff_it5 hours ago
    I have received over the years so much spam of this kind by multiple YC-funded companies that I now reflexively send to spam any email that mentions being YC-funded, regardless of how legitimate the email is.
    • AznHisoka4 hours ago
      Same here, having YC attached to your name is not the flex you think it is, its even the opposite for me
    • neya4 hours ago
      I don't blame you, the FOMO is real to the point even basic ChatGPT wrappers are getting funded these days, I guess.
      • jvwww2 hours ago
        I'm always interested to understand - what constitutes a basic ChatGPT wrapper? Is Legora, which is doing very well, a basic ChatGPT wrapper? Because if you don't view it as one, it certainly started as one.
  • callamdelaneyan hour ago
    YC is basically advising their startups to engage in shitty business practices, like trying to hire UK staff for half the salary and expecting 7 day weeks.
  • neya5 hours ago
    This is atleast fine as it's just spam, I got pulled into an actual scam and it never made it to the frontpage.

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45357205

    • medi8r3 hours ago
      But that is someone pretending to be YC which is sort of less interesting than a YC company doing something bad. Because phishers imitate legit companies all the time. Easy to get roped in and I sympathise, anyone is suseptable (today I almost clicked the phishing training email as it looked urgent and pushed the right buttons)
    • 5 hours ago
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    • ChrisMarshallNY5 hours ago
      Looks like GH nuked it, though.

      Hope they didn’t get too many folks.

    • nubinetwork4 hours ago
      That's a little creepier than the time I got an email from someone trying to push a new crypto coin to me because I contributed to OSS.
  • ttul14 minutes ago
    Didn't AirBnB famously spam people in the Bay Area as a "guerilla tactic" to build the business in its early days? This kind of fast and loose behaviour seems standard.
  • c164 hours ago
    Email address privacy is a feature offered by Github and replaces your day to day email: https://docs.github.com/en/account-and-profile/how-tos/email...
  • WhatsName4 hours ago
    Doesn't YC have some code of conduct or legal/ethical guidelines? I would assume a legal and compliance department would have some major headache if documented cases of misconduct jeopardize later due diligence. I would not fund or aquire a company on the radar of national regulatory bodies for something as stupid as this.
    • whalesalad28 minutes ago
      When you are a team of 3 people eating ramen there is no legal or ethical compliance department.
    • thinkingtoilet3 hours ago
      Like every other VC firm, the only thing they care about is money. They can pretend to morals, but they will never sacrifice one for the other in any meaningful way.
    • buellerbueller2 hours ago
      Imagine thinking in 2026 that an American tech company has ethics.
      • haute_cuisinean hour ago
        Only free individual can have strong ethics. There are no free people in capitalism, money is debt after all. Think of applied pressure once you sign under VC money and amount of brainwashing / gaslighting. I sincerely hope my observation is wrong.
        • buellerbuelleran hour ago
          If you are going to go down that road: life is debt, and there is no true freedom. We are bound by the needs of our meat-containers, after all.

          I don't like unfettered capitalism, but when I consider economies that have existed over time, it certainly looks like constrained capitalism affords the most freedom.

  • scosmanan hour ago
    I’m also getting “saw you on GitHub” spam from voice.ai

    And they are using a different domain for the emails so the spam markers don’t hit their primary domain.

  • EdNutting3 hours ago
    My solution to this is to use a Github-specific email address. All emails sent to that address which do not originate from GitHub are immediately reported as spam, marked read and deleted.

    I sometimes use different git/GitHub addresses depending on who I'm working for or specific projects so I can more accurately detect where data is being scraped from.

    • EdNutting3 hours ago
      N.B. Using service-specific emails is trivial - you don't need separate email accounts. Just use email aliases, e.g. "john.smith+github@gmail.com" -- which is an alias called "github" for "john.smith@gmail.com"
      • input_sh3 hours ago
        A simple regex filter will get rid of that. Now, if you use your own domain and have it configured as a catch-all, then you could do github@domain.tld.
      • gus_massa3 hours ago
        Don't spammers have an automatic filter to cleanup that?
        • EdNutting3 hours ago
          You'd have thought so, but no, in my experience this works very well. People doing this kind of spamming don't seem to be particularly bright, nor do they seem to spend any time/effort to clean up their scraped database.
  • lordgrenville3 hours ago
    Maybe a dumb question, but isn't this trivially solved with this .gitconfig?

        [user]
             name = lordgrenville
             email = <some_kind_of_id>+lordgrenville@users.noreply.github.com
    • ktm5j27 minutes ago
      Perhaps, but it doesn't change the fact that this is bad behavior for the company sending the email. Since YCombinator funded this company it makes sense that YC would want to know about how they are conducting business.
    • darknavi3 hours ago
      Sure, as long as you want to rewrite all of the history of all of your public repositories.
      • lordgrenville2 hours ago
        Oh yeah, I have always had this as it was pretty clear to me that the info in the email field is public.
    • haute_cuisinean hour ago
      Not all projects are hosted at github. You also might want to receve relevant mail from fellow developers.
      • lordgrenvillean hour ago
        Fair point. Pretty sure there is a way to have a few .gitconfig files, with the active one based on the remote URL domain, but it is more work.
  • an hour ago
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  • theturtletalks4 hours ago
    General advice would be to mark the email as spam or junk and hopefully their email platform penalizes them, but this has been working less and less. Email has truly become pay to play now.
    • suyash3 hours ago
      That's exactly what I've been doing with solicitation emails, reporting as SPAM on gmail.
  • pscanf5 hours ago
    I was also spammed (twice) by voice.ai.

    You mention GDPR, which also "applies" to me, though I wonder if what they're doing is actually illegal. I mean, after all, I'm putting my email on GitHub precisely to give people a way to contact me.

    Of course, I do that naïvely, assuming good faith, not expecting _companies_ to use it to spam me. So definitely what they're doing is, at the very least, in poor taste.

    • notpushkin4 hours ago
      > I'm putting my email on GitHub precisely to give people a way to contact me.

      They’re not only looking at the public email in your profile, they’re also looking at your committer email (git config user.email). You could argue that you’re not putting that out for people to contact you.

      (I’ve used that trick a couple times to reach out to people, too, but never mass emailing.)

    • victorbjorklund4 hours ago
      They spammed me as well.
    • zvqcMMV6Zcr5 hours ago
      Is there any company that will take my money to solve GDPR issues? And by solve I mean sue the spammers? For last few years I saw they "try" to look legit, by claiming addresses are managed by some Hungarian/Spanish shell company, hoping no one will be able to afford pursuing infractions over borders.
      • RobotToaster4 hours ago
        There's probably a law against it, but I've always thought a legal company could make decent money taking cases like this in bulk for free, on the condition that they get to keep all the compensation, while the "client" still gets the satisfaction of punishing the offending party.
        • rationalist3 hours ago
          On the U.S., only Attorneys General can go after violators of the CAN-SPAM Act.

          It needs to be modified like how individuals can go after telemarketers.

        • notpushkin4 hours ago
          That’s pretty much class action lawsuits!
      • KomoD5 hours ago
        > Is there any company that will take my money to solve GDPR issues? And by solve I mean sue the spammers?

        A lawyer

  • ChrisMarshallNY5 hours ago
    I’m not especially bothered by this [yet -AI is likely to make this worse]. It’s a fairly insignificant component of my spam catcher. At least, it’s a bit focused.

    Every day, I get deluged with hundreds of spam and scam emails, often because some knucklehead entered my email in a form (either accidentally, or as a throwaway red herring).

    • Maxious4 hours ago
      Sure but these YC spammers are identifiable and have much more to lose https://www.ycombinator.com/ethics/

      > Some examples of ethical behavior we expect from founders are:

      > - Not spamming members of the community

      > To maintain our community, if we determine (in our sole discretion) that a founder has behaved unethically during or after YC, we will revoke their YC founder status. This includes access to all Y Combinator spaces, software, lists and events. All founders in a company may be held responsible for the unethical actions of a single co-founder or a company employee, depending on the circumstances.

      • RobotToaster4 hours ago
        Has this ever actually been enforced?
      • ChrisMarshallNY4 hours ago
        > > - Not spamming members of the community

        Ah... but there's the rub.

        Define "the community."

        Do random GH accounts count as "members of the YC community"?

        Sorry, but unsolicited contact, much as I hates, HATESSSS it, is a classic component of any business, and has been, for many decades. I don't think it would be appropriate for a business organization to prohibit its members from engaging in "cold calling," of which, UCE is really an example.

        Using the YC branding/name, however, is a different matter.

  • jacquesm2 hours ago
    Sometimes they also scrape HN profiles, it is most irritating.
  • j16sdiz3 hours ago
    Over many years, I have got email from university for survey / research.

    This is not GitHub only, I have got a survey on how my experience interacting with folks on lkml

  • rlaabs4 hours ago
    I've received the exact same email from the same company.
  • hmokiguess11 minutes ago
    HN and YC walk a thin line between hacker culture and venture capitalist culture. I know it’s easy to think that because HN comes from YC them too are aligned with hacker culture, but no. YC is all cutthroat business.
  • bakugo4 hours ago
    This sounded familiar, so I checked my inbox and I did indeed receive a similar email from sanchitmonga@runanywheresdk.com earlier this month:

    > I came across your GitHub profile and thought you might be interested in what my team and I are building. We're developing an open source SDK that runs LLMs directly on-device.

    What's even more interesting is that both buildrunanywhere.org and runanywheresdk.com show a stock hostinger parking page when accessed in a browser. Something tells me they're intentionally registering these "alternate" domains specifically for spam, to avoid tanking the email reputation of their main runanywhere.ai domain.

    I guess I shouldn't be surprised given YC is going all in on AI and most AI companies are no better than the crypto scammers of yesteryear, but still.

    • an hour ago
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    • Imustaskforhelp3 hours ago
      I observed the same thing and it was only when you told me the main domain that I found their website.

      > Something tells me they're intentionally registering these "alternate" domains specifically for spam, to avoid tanking the email reputation of their main runanywhere.ai domain

      This is a really bad look on them.

      https://www.whatsmydns.net/domain-age?q=buildrunanywhere.org and https://www.whatsmydns.net/domain-age?q=runanywheresdk.com

      Both these domain were registered only 36 days ago

      Their main domain had been around for 6 month (216 days) tho:- https://www.whatsmydns.net/domain-age?q=runanywhere.ai

      (I also couldn't see any post created by them on YC checking algolia from their website fwiw)

      Seeing their star history on their product, I see some few interesting observations[0] Their star history was almost horizontal between december and february until it got vertical all of a sudden.

      [0]:https://www.star-history.com/#runanywhere.ai/runanywhere.ai&...

      I looked through their linkedin and found this website owned by them as well https://www.openclawpi.com/ and using the YC brand here as well. (registerered 26 days ago)

      This website looks fairly AI generated to me as well and there are some bugs within the original website as well which I am now incredibly more unsure of if generated by AI or not given the similarities between the two websites UI/UX as well.

  • axegon_3 hours ago
    I've received several similar ones over the years. At this point, if I get an email from someone I don't know and it contains a link, chances are it's spam. I genuinely doubt github(or any other company for that matter) would do something about it. While I fully support GDPR, the truth is, few people are willing to take action knowing how much bureaucracy would be involved...
    • dagi3d3 hours ago
      > how much bureaucracy would be involved... it varies from country to country, but filling a complaint on that matter is usually quite straightforward
  • outloudvi5 hours ago
    I usually check the "Received" header and report to the email service provider. Once in a while I receive a response saying the case is properly handled.

    These providers are the only ones that care about their reputation and thus may take some action. Investors? Nope.

    • john_strinlaian hour ago
      the problem is that the emails arent typically sent from the main domain.

      in this example, the email came from buildrunanywhere.org, which is just a parked domain. the real domain is runanywhere.ai, which they arent using for spam.

      so, once buildrunanywhere.org has their reputation burned from reports, they will simply register buildrunanywheres.org and start spamming again.

  • rodrigodlu3 hours ago
    I did receive these kinds of emails as well.

    And I use a different email fromy priority email for GitHub commits since 4 years ago.

    So just stop with marketing slop please.

    Yes, I work with AI, and I'm becoming pretty good at it.

    But this doesn't mean I'm comfortable pushing AI slop into potential users and customers.

    I (and they) want to use AI to facilitate their processes, not to ingest slop content.

  • idoxer2 hours ago
    I also received this shitty email 3 days ago
  • nprateem3 hours ago
    There's no reason to put your real email in git config unless you're signing, in which case repos should be private. I would have thought that was obvious.
  • koakuma-chan5 hours ago
    I have been having the same experience. If you starred a GitHub repo, and they think that their product is similar, they will send you their spam. I condemn this! They should be ashamed!
    • lyu072822 hours ago
      After 25 years on the internet dealing with spam, it would never even occur to me to invest the energy to write a letter to the offending companies investor. But more power to them I'd say!
  • atfzl5 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • speedgoose5 hours ago
      Why would you promote spam?
    • bilekas4 hours ago
      This is some next level spam posting. Not sure to be annoyed or impressed.
    • RobotToaster4 hours ago
      I feel like spam is somewhat less offensive when it's for FOSS, assuming it isn't some faux FOSS freemium scam. It's about the only spam I wouldn't mind getting.
  • ValentineC5 hours ago
    > These emails indicate that those companies scrape people's Github activity, and if they notice users contributing to repos in their field of business, send marketing emails to those users without receiving their consent. My guess is that they use commit metadata for this purpose.

    There are likely marketing email datasets floating around the internet that contain email addresses scraped from commit metadata.

    I use a catchall with a specific Git client (not GitHub) email address, and found spam and phishing emails being sent there quite a few times.

    • input_sh4 hours ago
      May not necessarily be from commit messages, there's at least one way simpler way: simply adding .gpg to the end of any user URL will return that user's public GPG key.