Show HN: CleverCrow: give tokens to your favorite projects

(clevercrow.io)

28 points | by zhubert 5 hours ago ago

43 comments

  • frangonf 4 minutes ago

    I always thought that the donate tokens thing would be done by sending some tokens from your personal sub to the maintainer's pool with some sort of proxy for tokens with rules, in a more direct way without doing it in cash, but yeah that's where the sweet fees live.

    If this gets any traction, the "share tokens with a friend" could be good PR for the labs, instead of buy me a coffee, buy me a clanker.

  • KomoD 3 hours ago

    I like the "maintainer stays in control" part, but isn't that also a problem in a way?

    The AI provider gets paid, the platform gets paid (20% is a lot in my opinion!), and the maintainer gets more unpaid work: another PR to plan, review, revise, merge, and then maintain... that's a lot of work.

    If people are willing to fund an issue, why should that money mainly cover LLM tokens rather than maintainer effort? Or at least, why doesn't the leftover money go to the maintainer instead of back to the donors?

    • zhubert 2 hours ago

      While I definitely like the Patreon for Software Builders idea, that's got some moving pieces which take additional legal work. My hope is that could come in time as it would be really cool.

      Regarding rewarding maintainer effort, I'm shooting for the value prop of "free AI", this only works if reconciliation is per-phase and liquidity is accessible across as many repos as possible. So if I had each reconcile drain the pool, there would be a lot of stalled work and human intervention required.

      That said, there are probably some maintainers that don't want "free AI" and that's okay.

    • acestus5 3 hours ago

      I don't think you understand if we were to just give people money then how are these platforms gonna take a cut of the action?

      sounds like you do not support other people that have nothing to do with the code that you like

    • gxnxcxcx an hour ago

      "We can pay you in exposure... And b̶e̶e̶r̶s̶ tokens!"

  • adamddev1 3 hours ago

    One of the cool things about code is that you can build stuff out of thin air, basically for free. It's not like woodworking where you have to pay for the wood.

    We are moving into a weird time where people are assuming that now we have to pay machines churn out code.

    Somehow they packaged up our own ability to think and are selling it back to us. If they can get us to forget how to do it we'll be the perfect customers, dependent forever.

    • thih9 24 minutes ago

      That’s what I don’t get about this whole AI push. It’s a global rug that everyone plans to pull, it’s sold at cost, it already presents major risks, everyone seems to be aware of all that and yet - the consumers and lawmakers are relatively quiet.

  • accountrequired 3 hours ago

    At first I was like "i want to use ai but dont have the money to burn for api tokens" cool. But then I realized the backers are essentially saying "i have money and could support developers but i choose to give the money directly to a mega corp and skip the human". I recommend you remove the policy of "Whatever the run didn't spend goes straight back to your backers' wallets." and make sure the human behind the wheel gets to eat. Somehow

    • fragmede 3 hours ago

      While we're in the token-equivalent of ZIRP, tokens don't cost what they cost, so there's sort of arbitrage to be had. I have tokens I've been given than I'm not using, but that's not the same as me having been given cash in the first place.

  • thih9 36 minutes ago

    What if the maintainer doesn’t want to implement a particular feature at the moment?

    I suppose this is the most common scenario - I doubt features are not getting implemented because maintainers are lacking tokens.

  • tadfisher 3 hours ago

    Congratulations, you've fulfilled one of ThePrimeagen's predictions! (A donation platform for AI tokens)

  • logged4upvoting 3 hours ago

    Shameless plug, I submitted a similar thought in here the other day. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48503555

    I like your approach of pooling resources around specific issues. That seems a practical missing piece for aiding the maintainers.

  • tfrancisl 3 hours ago

    Better yet: give them cold hard cash instead of what is arguably monopoly money for many OSS devs. Ironically this is something GitHub made "easy" with sponsorships several years ago.

    • skeledrew 2 hours ago

      How do you ensure that funds ear-marked for a donor-specified issue goes toward that issue and not something else?

      • throwatdem12311 23 minutes ago

        Then you offer to pay the maintainer their consulting rate to do it if they are willing.

      • tfrancisl 2 hours ago

        You don't sponsor people or projects to complete specific issues or build specific features in the first place. Sponsorship is a reward and token of appreciation for doing good work.

        • skeledrew 2 hours ago

          Some don't mind doing the overall reward and appreciation thing. And some just have that particular issue that they want handled so the project works - better - for them. Both cases are valid.

          • anamexis 2 hours ago

            Yes, and donation/sponsorship is not the tool for the latter.

            • skeledrew 43 minutes ago

              What matters is if it works out (gains traction) or not.

              • anamexis 36 minutes ago

                I'm not sure how that's related to your initial question of "How do you ensure that funds ear-marked for a donor-specified issue goes toward that issue and not something else?"

                If you want that, negotiate a contract.

      • lovich an hour ago

        You hit up the maintainer and negotiate a deal for that?

        If all you’ve got is relative pocket change they probably aren’t going to agree but if you put real money behind it and it doesn’t go against their vision of the project then most people would be willing to accept actual contracting work to expand their project.

        • skeledrew 44 minutes ago

          Sounds like a lot of trouble to go through, vs just sending some funds to a wallet with the assurance it'll go where you want it to or return to you.

      • lou1306 2 hours ago

        You actually hire a developer to work on that issue and not something else.

        • skeledrew 2 hours ago

          Pretty much what this ensures. Just that the "developer" is a LLM agent.

  • dom96 4 hours ago

    Is this just basically a bountysource? or are there ways to give projects tokens without just sending them money?

    • SOLAR_FIELDS 4 hours ago

      It does seem like a worse version of a FOSS donation platform that uses regular old money. I guess one advantage is that you can ensure your money goes directly to using AI to solve specific problems on the codebase, but what does that solve? Are people genuinely worried that if they donate to some FOSS platform that their dollars would go to something else? It seems to me like this removes agency from the FOSS maintainer and gives donators more control over their donation, even though it's explicitly designed not to.

      Its efficiency also relies on being better than whatever other platform/harness the maintainer is already using. It's limited to whatever the harness the platform provides, and they're taking a 20% platform fee on top. So I have to, instead of taking $10 from a donor, i take $10 worth of tokens, which may or not be spent more efficiently than me just going in with my claude subscription and fixing it, and I get $8 of those to run in a platform I don't control? In what world as a FOSS maintainer would I sign up for this? It just seems strictly worse than just having a platform that can back resolution of issues with real money... which already exists.

      • zhubert 4 hours ago

        Howdy Solar_Fields, these are great questions and I can give you my thoughts on how I feel it's different than cash donations (which are great if you can get them!). I look at this less like patronage and more an exchange of a resource to meet the needs of both parties. I want to support the projects I care about, some I'll give carte blanche, but some I have no connection to and really just want a bug fixed. Rather than fire up my own Claude Code and throw a PR at that maintainer, instead I'm saying, "hey, you know this codebase and can use this resource (tokens) better than me, please fix it with 'free' tokens." The platform fee is really just for AWS costs and is based on modeling, but I'm sure that's not the final form. Does that make sense?

        • SOLAR_FIELDS 3 hours ago

          Your reasoning is logical, but fails to pass the bar of "better than or even equal to just literally using some existing platform to attach a $X bounty to some issue I want resolved". There are several popular solutions that exist already to do that, your solution doesn't materially improve there, so what is the value add? It certainly gives the donor more confidence that the issue is being resolved in the way the donor wants it to, but if your problem is to make FOSS maintainer's life easier it doesn't move the needle in that direction, because it gives more power to already demanding FOSS users and less agency to the FOSS maintainer. And even if you solve that problem, does that value add cover a very-steep 20% platform fee?

          I think it's a cool idea, don't get me wrong. But it has to be a very good solution to get adopted, like, it would have to significantly streamline the operations of getting bugs resolved by a FOSS maintainer, and I think it's going to be tough for you to try to beat "fire up my favorite agent in my terminal with an already optimized setup and give it this issue that has $X attached" rather than "I have perhaps inefficient token spend from a platform I have no control over and I have to take 20% less of a donation for that privilege"

          In other words, I think you've built this solution for donors, and not FOSS maintainers, but really the bottleneck and problem and who you would be selling this solution to is not donors, but rather FOSS maintainers, and that's who you need to solve for if you want a platform like this to work. The donors have the easy job: they throw money at the problem to help it get solved faster. The FOSS maintainers have the hard job: They have to understand, accept the issue, propose a sensible solution, build it out, test it, etc. And your solution just makes it harder for those end users, because now they have two paths in their development workflow to getting issues resolved that they have to maintain, the non paid path and the paid path. So you're significantly increasing the overhead burden on these people and the material gain promised to those end users as the tradeoff is not convincing at all.

  • dofm 2 hours ago

    Can’t help thinking that if HN had a Black Mirror version (if this isn’t it), this would be one of the ideas in it.

    If you like a project enough to donate to them, give them the money directly and let them decide how to spend it. This is just convoluted, weird and vaguely dystopian.

    • zhubert an hour ago

      Well then, I'm hoping it's more of a San Junipero/Hang the DJ episode where good stuff happens by the end.

      I think there's a trust continuum that culminates at giving money no strings attached, but it starts somewhere else. If my goal (as creator of CleverCrow) is to get more people to support maintainers, then I have to open the funnel wide and connect with where people start (transactionally, I'm assuming).

  • throwatdem12311 24 minutes ago

    Tokens don’t come with CV clout which is what the vast majority of the slop PRs are really about.

  • holistio 3 hours ago

    Give them money.

  • ljcoco 2 hours ago

    interesting idea

  • MuffinFlavored 4 hours ago

    I think I've read from a few different sources that the Claude Code $100-$200/mo plans are subsidized so hard that it's basically $2k-$8k/mo in "would-be" equivalent API token usages.

    This kind of makes sense in that space while the subsidies (if true) last?

    Unrelated, "tokens" feels very like... back-then blockchain to me. All the craze.

    • wqaatwt 2 hours ago

      Or the API is massively overpriced. What Anthropic/OpenAI are charging for tokens says almost nothing about their actual costs, just what people are willing to pay.

      It’s just an obvious example of market segmentation by charging enterprise customers many times more than personal users while selling the same product

    • zhubert 3 hours ago

      Yeah, rising token costs definitely played into my thinking too. I want builders to be able to use the best models and it seems like they are getting more expensive. But maybe local models will get there?

  • fragmede 3 hours ago

    I had this idea! Happy to see someone actually made it.

  • Zopieux 3 hours ago

    Ah yes, clearly the one thing I want from my favorite projects is for them to embrace AI coding and immediately deskill such that their value-add or passion for the craft evaporates in the next 3 months.

  • AKSF_Ackermann 4 hours ago

    Just curious, why is there a login gate before seeing the list of projects that participate in the platform? Usually similar donation(?) websites list those publicly for better visibility and less friction.

    • zhubert 2 hours ago

      Probably an oversight on my part. I was thinking that backers would find out about CleverCrow through the project maintainers so the public pages are repo specific.

      As an aside, when you do login, CleverCrow shows projects that you've starred on GitHub to help find things you might want to support.