Money money money — The AI required for the site’s text generation wasn’t free, and the funds from the media company Digital Void soon ran dry. So the duo put up a message on the site that it was no longer in operation and continued with their lives. But after a few weeks, they decided to bring it back with a sustainable funding model.
Now, users can donate $2 via Paypal to unlock 100 uses for everyone. “Running AI models is not free, but we want it to be accessible to the whole internet indefinitely,” the site reads.
Petros and Kolman didn’t want to fund it with ads. “The philosophical idea behind website is that if you remove layers of ad tracking that bog down the internet, what is a site capable of?” Kolman told me. “There’s been a tremendous advancement in what is possible in a web browser in the past decade, but the average user doesn’t feel that because the vast majority of that tech goes into tracking you better. Connections are faster but web pages are still slow to load.” In addition, he doesn’t want ads to clutter the page and take away from the experience,” he explained.
What’s the point? — The site usually can’t adequately answer any real moral quandaries, and its creators certainly don’t want people to use it for real-life issues. “I don’t trust the AITA Reddit with moral issues and I don’t trust AYTA with anything,” Petros told me. Don’t let the site convince you to move across the world or quit your job or do anything rash: the answers are just a smoothly constructed mishmash of previous Reddit comments, not some all-knowing judge of character nor an oracle. According to Alex Petros, one of the points of the site was just to create “something snappy and delightful and fun.” So go have a few laughs — and pay your $2 dues!