Have a Fucking Website

(otherstrangeness.com)

199 points | by asukachikaru 3 hours ago ago

93 comments

  • Arainach 2 hours ago

    Someone wrote and deleted a comment saying

    > I don't get it. LLMs are supposed to have 100% bridged this gap from "normie" to "DIY website." What's missing?

    This is an all too common thought process among technologists, so:

    Where to even start? Well, let's start that every single "AI" company is massively overhyping everything to try to avoid any unfortunate realizations about the emperor's clothes regarding their CapEx and finances. Yes, even your favorite one.

    The very short version: running a small business like a restaraunt takes all your resources and then 20% more. Long hours, hard work, all your time. You do not have 2 hours to learn about LLMs or to pick which company to pay. From there:

    * Most people don't know what they want

    * Most people don't know the words for what they want

    * Even if you say "I want a website", what do you want it do look like? To say? These people aren't experts in web UX nor should they be.

    * You have some HTML and images. Where do they go now? Again people literally don't know what they want or need. If you realize you need a "web host", how do you pick a trustworthy one? How do you know if it's a good price? How do you get a domain name? How do you get the files onto the server?

    * Do you want people to be able to buy things? Now you're taking payment methods and have security concerns.

    * Your site is live. You want to change something on it. How do you do that? Where are the original files? How do you change them? How do you get the changes on the server?

    It's not "Hey, write me a website". There are lots of steps that assume a lot of knowledge, and it is easier, faster, and better for people to focus on their expertise and just pay some service for their web shop.

    • janalsncm 2 hours ago

      Yeah, setting up a website is a pain.

      But in reality there’s only a handful of things people care about for your restaurant: what, when, and where. Put up your menu, put up your hours, and put up your location. And a phone number.

      • Gigachad 4 minutes ago

        People put that stuff up on Google maps, Facebook, and Instagram now.

        I know it’s not popular with the crowd here, but those platforms are free, easy to use, and where the customers are. The mainstream options for a website like squarespace are absurdly expensive.

      • miramba an hour ago

        Menus change ie seasonal, and there is a daily changing handwritten chalkboard: Make a photo, put it on IG. Hours change: This week only opened from 8 instead 7: Post it on IG. Who has the time to answer a phonecall? And who uses phone numbers these days anyway? Text me on whatsapp like everyone else does. Disclaimer: Don‘t use IG. But if I want to know if our favourite pizza place is open (cook travels to football games a lot), I ask my wife to check on Insta.

    • ThrowawayTestr 40 minutes ago

      Squarespace made a business simplifying all that. It's expensive but there are templates and it had a WYSIWYG editor.

      • eastbound a minute ago

        It is expensive. Add to this: On this audience, people will lose their passwords, leave outdated information, transfer their business, and not connect often — I bet the security is more costly that a technical audience.

    • pigeons an hour ago

      And security

      • dd8601fn 2 minutes ago

        Most of these people just need like two or three static pages and a domain name. Same as it ever was.

    • squirrellous 2 hours ago

      Sounds like what we need is Facebook pages, except as a free service from the government or non-profit.

      • lneves 10 minutes ago

        Back in the day, there was this thing called the "Yellow Pages"! :-)

      • dumpsterdiver an hour ago

        Do you have any justification in mind for the “free service” being funded by tax payers? Why should it be free for the people who need it, and why should tax payers fund it?

        • tossandthrow an hour ago

          Such proposal doesn't need justification. You can merely disagree.

          Anyhow. The justification is that it is an important part of a communications infrastructure.

          Just like the government finances roads, etc.

          • ghurtado an hour ago

            I'm not disagreeing with you, but shouldn't free Internet access come before that?

            • Dylan16807 40 minutes ago

              We should be making sure everyone has internet access, but hosting some basic pages is about 1000x cheaper, so no I don't think free internet access should come before that.

        • palmotea an hour ago

          > Do you have any justification in mind for the “free service” being funded by tax payers? Why should it be free for the people who need it, and why should tax payers fund it?

          Because the government should provide useful services. It should be funded by tax dollars because I'm tried of libertarians, and it's well-demonstrated that the free market has consumer hostile incentives that I'm sick of.

          • 999900000999 17 minutes ago

            Alright cool.

            Your assuming the local government employed webmaster won't favor his friends restaurants.

            Craigslist basically is this, and it's more or less free.

  • raincole 3 minutes ago

    It's great in principle. However, in the past decade I've never visited even one single restaurant's website. I just check menus and phone numbers on google map. I trust google map photos (not saying they're 100% reliable) much more than a site owned by the restaurant's owner anyway.

  • rkagerer 38 minutes ago

    IMO it comes down to making your stuff available without it being behind a login-wall, pay-wall, ad-wall etc. The big platforms have made it seductively easy to get started with little effort, but you rob yourself of audience by letting them lock up your content behind it. I hope we see a larger exodus of users who take the author's lead and escape the walled gardens.

  • zjp an hour ago

    Millennials delenda est. Or maybe Gen X. But definitely millennials. I am stockpiling champagne for when performative profanity goes to the grave with the silent generation against which it is still rebelling 70 years later. I do not want to order the sloppy toppy burger at BURGERSLUT. Just give me a cheeseburger. But yes, you should build a website.

    • replooda an hour ago

      "Millenniales delendi sunt." Now, write it out a hundred times. If it's not done by sunrise...

      • dickiedyce an hour ago

        I daren’t ask “What have Millennials ever done for us?” because I have a suspicion that it would be a surprisingly unfunny answer.

        • zjp 12 minutes ago

          Cheems will be to millennials what the Grateful Dead logo was to Boomers.

        • techterrier 36 minutes ago

          they gave us doggo

    • typon an hour ago

      You will be forced to watch Firefly for eternity. Millenials will rule the internet for a 1000 years (a millenia).

    • jrflowers an hour ago

      > I do not want to order the sloppy toppy burger at BURGERSLUT. Just give me a cheeseburger.

      Seems odd to complain about the kitschy menu item names after walking into BURGERSLUT intent on ordering

      • zjp 33 minutes ago

        You don’t always get to choose the restaurant. Sometimes your friends drag you places. Sometimes your sister in law wants to go take a photo of the Castro Theater and then get a cookie, and you find yourself in Hot Cookie calling a chocolate chip a Basic Bitch. I just think that these kinds of "perfect agency" gotchas ignore the tradeoffs of living an actual life.

        • jrflowers 4 minutes ago

          What is the tradeoff in the scenario you described? You were enjoying time with your sister in law, you called a chocolate chip cookie a bitch, and then…? You weren’t having fun with your sister in law after that?

  • rkachowski 24 minutes ago

    Sometimes I get inspired to write something publicly, but then the fact that I'm providing another point of data to ChatGPTs training corpus which helps the american Department of War make shit memes about killing people - stifles that impulse pretty quickly.

    • DaSHacka 12 minutes ago

      The same could be said about posting anything publicly though, including our comments.

  • rich_sasha 39 minutes ago

    A few comments point out, and I agree, that setting up, never mind maintaining a webpage, has become a PITA:

    - server (AWS? 10 optional services to config etc etc, config, updates etc)

    - domain

    - SSL cert

    Are there solid providers who do it all-in-one? I pay one bill, get a domain, SSL certificate, renewed, and a managed, pre-configured Linux box, or even static hosting? Thinking of setting up a webpage for my consulting business and I'd rather not spend weeks fiddling with all this, or (shudder) use Wix.

    • hvb2 7 minutes ago

      I have actually been experimenting with this. And it's real simple.

      I think for these cases everyone should be shooting for a static site. In which case it is: 1. Rent a vps 2. Buy a domain 3. Set up nginx or something else 4. Copy files to the right folder 5. Point a dns record to said server 6. Use certbot to get an ssl cert installed for you

      It's not that hard really.

    • pprotas 33 minutes ago

      This has always been the case, not sure why you’d frame it as a recent development. Not that long ago you even had to PAY for an SSL cert. Domains are nothing new. You always needed a server.

    • sofixa 12 minutes ago

      Providers like Netlify, Firebase Hosting, CloudFlare are much better value for money for features for maintenance. Static hosting means you don't need to update the server because there isn't one, and there are even free tiers below a certain usage.

      There's still the usability thing, they're not made for non-techies. There's an assumption you'll use Git, etc. But there's no practical reason why Netlify CMS or similar couldn't handle everything.

    • orthecreedence 31 minutes ago

      NearlyFreeSpeech might be what you want. Been using them for over a decade and still love them. They handle domains/DNS, hosting (static and other), mysql hosting, email forwarding, and much more. They also have great content policies, ie they only kick you off if you're breaking the law.

  • alastairr 23 minutes ago

    Couldn't agree more. Worth pointing out that sites owned by Meta and Twitter in particular have become much more hostile to signed out users - often impossible to view a business' listing without a signed in account. Walled gardens are going to wall, of course. But I'm not sure how much small business owners realise that a proportion of traffic / interest has much more difficulty in finding them.

  • techterrier 36 minutes ago

    Good idea, I did just such a thing myself, deleting all my socials and only posting my photos to my own website: https://dombarker.co.uk/

    Was fun to make 'just a website' for a change too.

    • Klonoar 10 minutes ago

      I run something similar, ish: https://photos.rymc.io/

      I still have an account or two elsewhere, but all photos get posted here then linked there with decent open graph previews.

    • zuzuleinen 7 minutes ago

      Your photos are amazing!

    • tristanMatthias 33 minutes ago

      Great photos! Thanks for sharing!

  • scosman 43 minutes ago

    Is there a way to view IG pages without logging in? I would love to delete the app and setup privacy redirect.

    • sofixa 9 minutes ago

      It depends. If there's a share id (?igsh=xxc) in the link usually no, but if you remove it usually yes. Opening more than a few posts/stories will result in a popup to sign in, but at least the core page and introduction should be visible.

    • ptek 39 minutes ago

      Try switching to desktop mode

      • asimovDev 12 minutes ago

        it still forces you to log in when you scroll and you can't view any post iirc. Maybe solvable with ublock filters or some console commands but I haven't bothered

        • usea 3 minutes ago

          You can view posts by opening them in a new tab.

  • ghayes 2 hours ago

    Instead of focusing on why having a website is better for customers (100% it is), the article is really an attack on... developers at Meta and tech other companies? I love a good profanity laced rant, but the entire article reads unfocused and unpersuasive.

    • einr an hour ago

      the entire article reads unfocused and unpersuasive.

      Nice, a human wrote it! Thanks for the recommendation!

    • vivid242 2 hours ago

      I disagree. It is not an attack on the developers, but the platforms‘ mechanics.

    • system2 2 hours ago

      I agree, the reasons were skipped, except for business hours and rates. People really need a reason to spend countless hours on something digital.

      • kulahan 2 hours ago

        Countless hours? Get someone to make you a webpage, they can use Wix or Shopify or something like this. It’s never been easier or cheaper. In the grand scheme of running a business, it’s one of the best effort:return ratios you can find.

  • edg5000 3 minutes ago

    Well articulated!

  • zhivota an hour ago

    So how do I do that? I can't host it easily on the machine in the office because NAT and dynamic IPs have trained us that this is not really possible (it is, buty you have to know what you're doing).

    Pay a hosting provider, but who? Do I need to buy an SSL certificate, because we decided we need HTTPS everywhere for some reason? What about if my site gets DDOSed? Do I get charged more?

    So I can use something free like Github Pages, but now I'm under a different tech overlord, no?

    I can see why people just say screw it and go back to IG/FB. The web is too complicated now.

    • kraai 17 minutes ago

      I think many people here are overthinking it. OP is mostly talking about simple business website not huge platforms to host. Ddos protection is kind of irrelvant for such small projects. But anyhow there are so many local hosting companies (europe) for at least the last 10 years that provide a free ssl cert, one-click options for wordpress etc. It’s really not that complicated.

    • flomo 34 minutes ago

      Irrelevant nerd myopia. They mostly just paid someone to do it (until they decided "wordpress guy" was not worth the marketing budget). If anything DYI is easier than ever.

  • elwebmaster an hour ago

    What techies are missing is that AI doesn't make it possible for mom and pop shops to create and manage a website but it levels the playing field for enterprenuers. We can't expect plumbers and restaurant owners to spend 12+ hours fighting with AI website builders just to get a cookie cutter-website that is nothing more than a brochure. Nor can they fork thousands of dollars for web design agencies and spend months in mindless meetings. Thanks to AI now there is a way: small mom and pop local website builders can offer a white-gloves solution that scales and drives revenue for the SMBs.

    • wolfhumble 40 minutes ago

      They have already been doing that for 10-15 years via page builders and themes in Wordpress. It is easier now, but small players have had relatively decent tools for quite some time.

      • kraai 15 minutes ago

        Exactly this. It was already very easy. Just choose a local hosting company, most of them have free ssl and one click installs for wordpress etc.

        People here are overthinking it.

  • capncleaver an hour ago

    The aside about mailing lists is well made: with the exception of SMS, email is the one method of customer contact not mediated by big tech networks (save arguably Gmail) and portable across service providers. In games it’s the best way to keep in touch with players, much better than discord where the dots accumulate and most members ignore most server updates and notifs.

    Bring back site specific forums, too ;) But most businesses’ customers don’t have enough to talk about for a forum.

  • ptek 40 minutes ago

    Www.neocities.org is waiting. It’s a small fun site to practice with :)

  • andreygrehov an hour ago

    +1 I can’t even delete my old stuff on HN. I don’t own my comments here. In contrast, I can go ahead and delete any of my Facebook posts or comments from 10 years ago. In a way, HN is more hostile than Facebook.

    • vasco an hour ago

      I'm sure I've read they support this if you email them. It's a manual action but if you're based in Europe they will have to do it by law.

      • unmole 37 minutes ago

        > Europe they will have to do it by law.

        Realistically, they can simply ignore it with no consequences.

        • vasco 20 minutes ago

          Well I've read comments by dang saying they support it so that is besides the point. Just email and find out.

  • Lammy an hour ago

    > Set up a website

    I dislike how this article handwaves its own recommendation away. The steps required to “have a fucking website” are so much more complex than they used to be. Mandatory† TLS is the biggest hurdle, because now there needs to be software running to renew your certs instead of just tossing some plain files up in a directory on an HTTP server that could run for years unattended. Gone are the days when it was easy for a website to outlive its author, and it's our fault!

    Yes, the fact that the world's most popular browser puts a big red NOT SECURE!!! warning next to any non-TLS website makes it mandatory regardless of the fact that plain HTTP still technically loads. Scareware works on people or they wouldn't do it.

    • throawayonthe an hour ago

      i don't see how that's more of a hurdle than running an always-accessible web server -- for the average normie (plus managing dns in the first place etcetc)

      i think the implication is "just use a web host" and i agree

      if i was helping someone set up a website i'd either set them up with a WYSIWYG website builder-hoster a la wix (i'd have to google around for a specific one to try though) or if i had faith enough, i'd set them up with a workflow publishing to cloudflare pages; both would handle the domain and ssl for them

      if they want to take payments then idk lol

  • asukachikaru an hour ago

    On one hand, I totally agree, as I'm all for indie small web. Haven't used Facebook and Instagram for years. On the other hand, it's not (small) business owners deliberately choose to not have a website, it's customers saying it's too much friction for anything outside of FB or IG. For some people if you are not on IG you do not exist, no matter how nice your website is.

    • tayo42 an hour ago

      I don't think he's saying don't have social media and replace it with a website but also have a basic website in addition to what ever else your doing

      • asukachikaru 38 minutes ago

        Then it's twice the work. For a mom-and-pop restaurant, putting food on the table (pun intended) probably already cost them 24 hours a day.

  • gigabyte9592 an hour ago

    Sure, right after DNS, hosting, SSL, and convincing Google I exist.

    • rich_sasha 44 minutes ago

      For the last bit - nothing wrong with the same Insta account with a link to your webpage. Agreed on the first bit.

  • vivid242 2 hours ago

    You‘re absolutely right. (I‘m not an LLM ;-)) And the fact that (I‘m looking at you, LinkedIn!) platforms actively block people from using external links is a good warning sign.

    Connection with people- this is what I want from the internet, too.

  • rdevilla 2 hours ago

    Well fucking said. JavaScript was a fucking scourge upon the web as it convinced everybody that you need to know how to write an "app" to share text and jpegs, which we have been doing with the Document Object Model for literally decades.

    Websites and HTML/CSS are documents. If you can write a Word document you can write a website. Death to walled gardens which have been the main locus of enshittification of the web.

    If the CG-NAT problem can be solved one day I look forward to a rebirth of true P2P networking and information sharing with no central authority.

    • misswaterfairy an hour ago

      I wonder if Microsoft FrontPage was still a thing HTML/CSS websites might be a little more common?

      Those were the days...

  • askmike an hour ago

    I think most comments miss the point on why many small businesses don't have websites:

    It's not about it being hard to create and manage a website, it's that the vast majority of customers use social media platforms (as well as platforms like google maps) to find out about shops and F&B. For many businesses having an Instagram page will draw a lot more people than having a random website.

  • johnfn 32 minutes ago

    > The concept of congregating in walled gardens owned by pedophilic fascist speed freaks

    Are we really calling everyone we don't like a pedophilic fascist now? I honestly had really hoped that this sort of polarized, low-quality content wouldn't make it onto HN. :(

    • speedgoose 29 minutes ago

      I thought it was pretty factual.

      • johnfn 20 minutes ago

        If you think that everyone who works on a website that is a walled garden is a "pedophile fascist", I don't know what to say to you -- I don't think we live in the same reality.

        • speedgoose 12 minutes ago

          It’s not what is written?

  • qwertytyyuu an hour ago

    You have a what website? A website that does what!?

  • blinkbat 3 hours ago

    Agree but most small biz don't conceive or care about the internet this way

    • kulahan 2 hours ago

      What makes you say that? It’s rare that a store I’m going to, even local only, doesn’t have a website.

      • mrhyyyyde an hour ago

        It's very common, almost 1 in 3, to _not_ have a website or online presence (~10mm+ small businesses have no online presence or site) in 2025.

      • konart an hour ago

        I guess it depends on the type of business on your geography.

      • wahnfrieden 2 hours ago

        It is not RARE.

  • Jeffrin-dev an hour ago

    The sentiment is right but I think it misdiagnoses why small businesses don't have websites.

    It's not laziness or ignorance. A solo tattoo artist working 50-hour weeks doesn't have 4 hours to debug why their Squarespace contact form stopped working, chase down a DNS issue, or figure out why Google isn't indexing them. Instagram just works, and their customers are already there. That's a rational choice, not a failure of character.

    The real problem is that we never built infrastructure for this. Email has SMTP. Phone numbers have number portability. But there's no equivalent for social followings — no standard that lets you pack up your audience and move it somewhere else. That's by design, obviously, but yelling at the tattoo artist for not having a website doesn't fix it.

    The mailing list advice is genuinely the best practical suggestion here though. Low friction, you own it, works across every platform shift for the last 30 years. If there's one thing worth pushing people toward, it's that — not the website itself.

    • einr an hour ago

      Maybe turn off this dumb bot since it’s against the rules?

  • vasco an hour ago

    So edgy, is this person older than 14 years old? Who brags about deleting a Facebook account as if it's an accomplishment?

  • stackghost 2 hours ago

    Random pho restaurants (or whatever) are usually literal mom-and-pop shops and asking these people to put up (and maintain!) a website is usually too daunting for them. These are the places that tend to end up with only a facebook page or an insta.

    It's just too hard for normies to DIY, and local "web dev firms" are usually predatory in their insistence on making decisions that require ongoing maintenance, because recurring revenue.

    Just try to get your local web design firm to build you a static html-only site and hand you the creds for all the hosting, etc.

    What random hair salons or coffee shops need is basically github pages with bring-your-own-domain, WYSIWG editing that works on mobile, and zero git. but AFAICT no such service exists.

    • weird-eye-issue 2 hours ago

      Really, it's 2026 and you don't think that there are website builders for small businesses? I'm sorry, but are you kidding me?

    • crooked-v 2 hours ago

      You just described Wix and Squarespace.

      • stackghost an hour ago

        I've admittedly never heard of wix, but I was under the impression squarespace was selling "e-commerce solutions" and stuff.

  • protocolture 2 hours ago

    Lots of businesses never get beyond a mobile number lmao

    • 0_____0 2 hours ago

      In MX and elsewhere lots of them are just mobile number through Whatsapp specifically. Like they have a phone number but it may be data-only.