1943 points by jjcm 993 days ago | 590 comments on HN
| Moderate positive
Contested
Mission · v3.7· 2026-02-28 10:20:19 0
Summary Creator Empowerment & Privacy Advocates
Non.io is a creator-focused platform with a subscription funding model that explicitly advocates for user privacy and creator economic rights. The site positions itself as an alternative to ad-supported social platforms, arguing that subscription-based funding enables user dignity (not treating users as products) while ensuring creators receive fair compensation. The evaluation reveals strong alignment with UDHR provisions on privacy (Article 12), property rights (Article 17), cultural participation (Article 27), work and fair wages (Article 23), and freedom of expression (Article 19).
Some other fun tidbits: I'm trying to make this an API-first service, with the frontend being just a representation of how to use it. Because of that, I wanted to make the frontend as reusable/refactorable as possible, regardless of frontend framework. I relied on webcomponents for everything, and the full app is a SPA built purely in vanilla js.
I'd never recommend anyone take that approach, it was masochistic. Use react or something. It was a great learning experience, but writing everything in vanilla js does slow down dev time overall.
The main page shouldn't be login-walled. I don't want to create an account just to find out what kind of content this community has and how active it is.
A couple of things I noticed immediately, that you may want to consider.
- landing page is not responsive, hard to read on Safari on iOS
- login screen in-app couldn’t be closed, had to navigate away to exit, perhaps a hidden icon somewhere?
- comment threads seemed to have the same issues on iOS as the landing page
Definitely like the direction you took for the UI, looks like with a little bit of work it’ll become a great platform though!
The idea of posters getting real money instead of fake internet points when their posts do well seems interesting, but maybe an unintentional experiment in unintended consequences. Moderation will be extremely important to prevent low-effort memes and content regurgitation and the like from saturating your main channels. Have you considered how you will encourage moderation and keep it free from the corrosive influence of quid quo pro? (hey moderator, you overlook this spam post and maybe I cut you in on the profits)
When real money is involved on the internet the worst kinds of stuff results, and it takes a lot of effort to avoid it. How's that going to work?
None of this is to take away from your accomplishments here, by the way. The exact opposite in fact, you've got an interesting enough idea that it prompts interesting questions of the mechanics.
P.S. do you have any long-term plans to IPO this if it becomes successful? If not, some kind of guarantee that this platform is immune to enshittification would probably be very, very popular.
Congrats on the hard work, and the idea is fine, but the problem is that tech like this is a cheap commodity in a massively oversaturated space, and without a hook that makes the platform exceptional (innovative/clever/beautiful design, unique aggregation features, inherently interesting content, reimagined user/content/moderation dynamics etc etc), this kind of thing is dead in the water because it lacks a network effect. Add in the upfront subscription model and failure to launch is basically assured.
When I visit the root domain I shouldn't be greeted with a marketing splash page, you need interesting content in the user's face right away, entice their curiosity and drive the user to explore the site... even as a fellow developer, my first instinct is to abandon the page as soon as I'm greeted with the cliche startup marketing page. Consider the user experience when I visit reddit.com or news.ycombinator.com or any other link aggregation competitor. What you have now is a tech demo, not a platform. Sorry if that's a little harsh, but I mean well! Good luck!
Cool project! For something like this to succeed at Reddit's scale, it should stay snappy under load (which admittedly Reddit doesn't). So clicked through to Github to see what it's written in:
> Languages
> Shell 100.0%
I admired the absolute chadliness of this decision - until i realised this was just a top-level super-repo.
Requiring a login to see anything at all is too much friction for this kind of thing. (Or at least I couldn't find a link that let to content from the main page without logging in.)
The UI is nice though. Minimal dead space in the comments.
"A place for all content types - No matter what you make, Nonio is equipped to support it. With no advertisers, you aren’t at risk of having your content demonetized."
How far are you willing to go to defend this? There's been lots of technical talk in this thread so far, but I'm curious on this portion.
So far I'm LOVING the UI. I actually think you should drop the payment part ASAP and just push for more users in the standard social media format.
I also think a staggered release of new "tags" is a fantastic idea, but needs to scale ASAP (until the site is ready for users to create their own hashtags/subreddits)
EDIT: After using this more, it's so exciting and fun to see something so new and fresh. It really feels like I'm back in 2010.
You say that you've been working on this for 4 years, but there's no content here. Have you not been using it yourself for 4 years? Where is the content that you and your friends have been posting?
I've spent enough time [Edit: on HN] to remember App.net¹ which was launched with similar fanfare but was shut down after few painful years of trying to find a PMF. The lesson I learned from that saga was HN might not be the best place to validate your product. We're too smart to diss even good ideas like DropBox.
Go and talk to your potential customers and I hope the App.net story gives you some inspiration.
Depending on how fast you can execute it may be too late, but right now you have a brief window of opportunity to get a seedbed of users.
Reproduce the Reddit API exactly such that these soon-to-be-defunct client apps can work with minimal changes (ideally, just a configurable root domain). Reach out to the client authors and see if they will enable your site. Maybe you'll capture some of those user communities.
# means fragment and that's kept local and not sent to the server unless client side Javascript sends it to the server. I would use an identifier that doesn't already mean something to the URL.
I like the concept, though I agree with a lot of the comments about people content farming and reposting comments for upvotes and I think that would kill the site (since Reddit already has enough of a problem with this and that's just for fake internet points).
The thing that I think a lot of people are missing about Reddit is that it's not a content aggregation site like HN or Digg or your site, Non.io; it's a community of communities.
I've seen so many reddit-likes which switch from 'subreddits' to hashtags, but that doesn't work for what makes Reddit great. On Reddit, you can create your own communities and control who is in them, set rules for them, moderate them how you want, and so on. For example, /r/AskHistorians has some extremely specific rules and moderation; /r/GirlGamers is a community of like-minded (typically female) individuals. /r/Trans is (in theory?) a safe place for the trans community to interact with one another. /r/BreakingMom is a place where mothers can vent without repercussions and non-mothers are not welcome to contribute content.
None of that is possible in this hashtag design. The #trans hashtag will be a shitshow of offensive, triggering, and deliberately abusive content, and there's nothing the trans community could do about that.
Toxic users on your platform will drive out anyone they don't like, and the only recourse users will have is to ask you (the admins/moderators) to ban those users - and now you have to make the decision of all of the content that is allowed on the site. Are you going to allow transphobic jokes on the site? If so, you're going to drive away trans people (and anyone with a sense of decency). If not, you're going to have to constantly be banning people from the whole site and not just part of it.
I think it's a cool site, but I think this software could be used to replace only one subreddit and not all of Reddit itself.
The use of tags vs discrete communities keeps it from being a viable alternative to Reddit for me.
I have a real disdain for tags for user generated content. Every site I have seen use tags I end up having to wade through a ton of spam or vaugly related content to whatever tag I am looking for. The only exception I can think of is Hashtags for twitter but that is due to the character limit.
I understand that people see tages as a solution to crossposting but I think people overlook the benefits of crossposting. Being able to have seperate conversations on AI art in an art community vs programming community is more useful to me than having a single post that both communities comment on.
I like the idea and the price is fine. But I'd rather pay $2 for the servers instead of rewarding posters. The problem is that once they start making money it will become too clickbaity/commercial. I strongly dislike the mass content most "pro" YouTubers like Linus tech tips and the like generate.
Reddit never really had this because all you could give was subscription time. Paying causes this mainstream focus and clickbaiting.
Maybe you feel the need to attract content generators to your platform but it will only create more mediocre content IMO.
What was so great about Reddit was that people created amazing content that they were passionate about, regardless of whether it paid well or not.
To be blunt, this had enough bugs out of the gate that I nearly didn't even finish registering! It feels like you rushed this out to capitalize on the reddit collapse, which I understand, but it may flop entirely because of these problems.
The registration kept failing with no indication as to why, just a red X on the button. I finally figured out that it simply didn't like my email address, trying a different one worked.
Then I tried to change my profile picture. That was failing completely silently; I guess .PNG files aren't excepted? I tried the same avatars that I use on every other site without issue. I did try a random .JPG, and that worked.
Opening the videos tab, none of the posts show the video, clicking on them doesn't expand anything, and the text isn't aligning, some of them randomly have the title in the center of the bar. I can't even figure out how to view the video.
This is on Firefox, latest version, no extensions.
EDIT: On further exploration, the submission description box has a bug. The first letter I wanted to type somehow got stuck as the last letter, and there was no way to delete/move it. "y description looked like this.M"
When I load the all page, I get an alert that just says "1", which feels like it's probably a successful XSS attack. Given that, I can't justify putting my credit card number directly into the site. If it took Paypal, Apple Pay, or similar I would absolutely give it a try for a few months.
Screenshot of the alert (imgur marked it as nsfw because it includes a thumbnail of a post that is mildly nsfw): https://imgur.com/a/TmwO1jg
Another moderation risk is that whoever is moderating has an incentive to delete people’s potentially successful posts and repost under their own or a friend’s alt account
Mostly agree. The screenshot in the top right looks good, like professional app I might actually use. But I want to actually browse the site and check it out without first slogging through a registration process. If it’s free to view/browse anyway, then enable doing that without registering. Register and pay if you want to post.
Edit: You can browse without registering after all, here’s the link: https://non.io/#all (didn’t see it on the landing page or OP post).
I think a lot of this is exactly the kind of constructive critique the OP is looking for, and I upvoted your comment for being high-value.
But I’m currently working on being a little more diplomatic, and too often I regret throwing in low-signal “this is a tech demo” type summaries next to my substantial remarks.
I hope this comes off as “fellow user working on this” and not a person in a glass house with rocks.
This is why I've been so curious as to exactly what Reddit is really trying to do with this api change. If the point of Reddit is to consume content then the content itself (and the amount of it consumed) is really their business model so all actions should support that vs. getting people to arbitrarily be on their site. If your business is content, it shouldn't matter if it's a third-party app or if it's on your main site. I just cannot figure out the long-term logic behind this move (ofc short-term it's about $$ and their IPO but this'll hurt their model in the long-run)
> this kind of thing is dead in the water because it lacks a network effect
Which is why launching any social network is a dice roll. You need that initial momentum to propel it further, or some 'lucky break' to get it popular. Many social networks got popular accidentally, typically because some VIP joined the platform and everyone went to follow the VIP, increasing DAUs / MAUs which is the only metric social media networks care about.
Do any 3P clients let you point their app to backends other than reddit.com? Or are you just saying it would be easy for app developers to quickly port their app to non.io?
On the flip side, the fact that this is a crowded space means that there’s a demand for it. And this isn’t a Reddit clone, it has a business model which is pretty close to the best anyone could hope for in my opinion. In any case, I applaud any efforts that could unseat Reddit or make them reconsider their greedy hard line.
I encourage the creator of Non.io to identify the key shortcomings of Reddit and improve upon them. Don’t just try to clone Reddit beyond the basic image/link board, otherwise you’ll just be playing their game. Change the game. There is a Folding Ideas video on this topic which has some great insights with respect to YouTube: https://youtu.be/r3snVCRo_bI
My original plan was to pay for ~100 users accounts and seed the site with content for a proper launch. Given what's happening today though, it felt at least pertinent to show off the current state and get some feedback.
The balance between splash page on landing / landing on content is a hard one, but I think you're right. I am worried though that without conveying the initial business model, it'll be harder for users to understand that this isn't a direct reddit clone.
If everyone chips in $1, and their $1 is split between all the things they’ve upvoted, isn’t the financial incentive to produce posts that are upvoted by people who don’t typically upvote? That actually seems like a pretty interesting incentive.
> maybe an unintentional experiment in unintended consequences
Just charging $2 might be a huge improvement over reddit because it makes sock puppets cost too much to scale.
Paying out for upvotes, I fear will incentivize lowest-common-denominator content. If you go to a quality tech subreddit and sort by "Top" comments, they will mostly be memes. They won't be from an expert solving your very specific problem. And more generally, I worry it will reward that twitter-style, shrill political dunking, binary thinking, maximalism and in-group point scoring. This may be a recipe for an even more toxic r/politics.
Very interesting trying to puzzle out how a given incentive structure will play out in practice.
I've been working on the code for 4 years. Only opened up posting to others today. Obviously have test posts, but I deleted many of them prior to this post.
I think an option to only show comments from people subscribed to the same communities as you, or the community you're viewing the content from could solve this.
Yeah one key missing feature is subreddit creation and moderation.
Without all the free labor from moderators curating content for topics with different tastes and ideas about what the community should be, it's going to be a struggle to build a community.
It's a hybrid model, and I'd be curious if people like this or not as it's been something I'm fiddling with.
Note that when you vote, you upvote the tag itself. The vote within the tag determines its order when browsing the tag itself. So if something is tagged with #formula1 and has 483 upvotes for the tag, it will appear high in the #formula1 list view. If it's also tagged with #funny with 1 upvote, it will appear low in the #funny list despite the high votes on #formula1.
Yeah, earning money for posting on a service like this sounds good at first, but it's often a magnet for folks that don't really care about contributing to the platform beyond that. These usually fall into 2 categories:
1. Hustlers and schemers, who want to get rich quick (usually the folks that like spam, blackhat SEO and 'hustle culture').
2. Folks in 3rd world countries who see this as a ticket out of poverty.
The former are a disaster for any good community site or service, and the latter have the potential to become the former, since 'spam the crap out of a service for the chance to make more money' becomes an enticing proposition. A big digital marketing forum shut down its revenue sharing because these folks flooded it with low quality crap, the likes of Medium and Quora have become hellholes due to the same incentives, and crypto based 'pay to earn' games have literally led to people starting up sweatshops to make money in them.
Having it also cost money to use the site will help a bit, but it'll also filter out many good users due to not wanting to spend money on a subscription, and create a mental calculus of "can I make more from my content than it'll cost me to sign up", which isn't ideal in itself.
I also want to add: HN is an especially bad place to validate this type of product because HN has the exact same interface as reddit. This post is popular because of its novelty, there is an incentive to upvote this post and say whatever OP wants to hear in order to get him to keep working on this project. Because "having alternatives never hurts". But it hurts the person developing the alternative. He already lost 4 years of his life to this. Hopefully he wises up and pivots before he wastes another 4 years.
The fact that I had to register at all to see the content (unless I am missing something obvious) was nearly a turn-away point for me. But I ran into the same thing. But it seems to be an issue with the site on Firefox. I was able to register with Chrome just fine.
Obviously I can’t defend “all content types” to the level that say, the darkweb can. I’ll still abide by the law. That said, I don’t have the pressure of ad networks to filter out content.
I still have pressures however. Using Stripe and credit cards for payment processing means I have to ensure the sites primary purpose isn’t adult content, as if that content dominates its very likely Stripe will choose to no longer do business with me. I can still support it, but it can’t be the primary purpose.
The site explicitly advocates for user privacy, stating 'We wont track you or sell your data to advertisers,' 'We currently do not use frontend tracking,' and 'We don't sell user data.' This is a central theme of the platform's messaging.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'We wont track you or sell your data to advertisers' and 'Our aim is to provide a high quality user experience. We don't believe adding trackers or slowing down our site with ads is the way to do that.'
Privacy policy states: 'We currently do not use frontend tracking, nor is any of your information sent to third parties (with the exception of Stripe for financial data)' and 'Nonio stores a cryptographic hash of your password using the bcrypt algorithm. We do not store passwords in plain text.'
The site declares: 'Your payment info is never stored on nonio's servers. It's secure in the hands of Stripe.'
Privacy policy explicitly states: 'None of this information is sold or shared with third parties' regarding stored data
Inferences
The comprehensive privacy architecture (no frontend tracking, separate payment processor, hashed passwords, no third-party sharing) demonstrates substantial structural commitment to Article 12 privacy rights
The foundational business model choice (subscription vs. ads) reflects a philosophical commitment to protecting privacy as a core platform value
The site explicitly advocates for property rights in digital content: 'You own your content. We aren't allowed to use it without permission.' This is a clear, unambiguous statement about content ownership.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'You own your content. We aren't allowed to use it without permission. However we reserve the right to feature thumbnails of your content in screenshots / promotions.'
The site stores and returns user-submitted content (audio, images, HTML) to users with usage controls
Inferences
The explicit assertion of user ownership reflects strong commitment to Article 17 property rights in digital creation
The narrow exception (thumbnails only) creates a minimal constraint on full ownership and control
The site explicitly centers participation in culture and creativity: 'By being a part of nonio, you're choosing to support artists, musicians, writers, and creators of all types. We're excited to have you, and we look forward to seeing what you create as well.'
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'By being a part of nonio, you're choosing to support artists, musicians, writers, and creators of all types.'
The site enables participation: 'Submit posts,' 'Comment on posts,' with content types including audio, images, video, HTML, and text
The site provides visibility to creative work through upvoting/downvoting mechanisms and funding allocation
Inferences
The explicit focus on supporting 'artists, musicians, writers, and creators of all types' demonstrates commitment to cultural participation
The technical infrastructure (submission, feedback, funding) enables practical cultural and scientific participation
The site advocates for creator compensation as a central value: 'The point of the platform is to fund their creativity.' The entire business model is framed as enabling creators to earn fair income from their work.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'The point of the platform is to fund their creativity' and 'your subscription pool is divided evenly between everything you upvote that month'
The site provides creator earnings tracking: 'Earnings this month' and 'Admin payouts' / 'User payouts' showing amounts earned
The site states: 'Funds in your wallet will auto-deposit into your Stripe Connect account at the end of each month'
Inferences
The direct subscription-to-creator compensation model provides fair wages for creative work
The monthly payout cycle ensures regular, predictable income for creators
The site advocates for human-centered design and explicitly rejects treating users as products. Emphasizes freedom from surveillance and dignity in platform design.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'With a subscription service, you are my customer. I tailor all of my experiences to the demands of the user. With an ad supported service you aren't the customer, you are the product.'
The site declares: 'We wont track you or sell your data to advertisers' and 'Our aim is to provide a high quality user experience. We don't believe adding trackers or slowing down our site with ads is the way to do that.'
Inferences
The explicit rejection of treating users as products reflects the preamble's foundational commitment to human dignity and freedom from exploitation
The choice to fund via subscriptions rather than surveillance aligns with UDHR's emphasis on freedom and respect for persons
The site enables and frames freedom of expression as central to the platform: 'Submit posts,' 'Comment on posts.' The open-source code also enables transparency about how expression is managed.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
The site enables: 'Submit posts,' 'Comment on posts,' 'Upvote and downvote comments'
The site states code is open-source on GitHub, enabling review of expression mechanisms
The site notes moderation: 'I will be deleting posts that are simple alert tests'
Inferences
Multiple expression channels (posts, comments, voting) support freedom of expression as a core platform function
Open-source availability enables community oversight of expression governance, though founder retains deletion authority
The site frames creator support as universal, stating 'creators of all types' can participate in the platform regardless of background or content category.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'By being a part of nonio, you're choosing to support artists, musicians, writers, and creators of all types.'
The site offers a free tier ('$0/mo') alongside paid tiers, stating 'Everyone starts somewhere. Even if you don't contribute monetarily, you can still shower the creators with praise in the comments!'
Inferences
Welcoming 'creators of all types' without apparent content-based restrictions indicates respect for equal dignity across diverse expression
The free tier ensures fundamental platform access independent of economic status
The site frames itself as open to 'creators of all types' without apparent content-based ideology restrictions, implying freedom of conscience in what can be created and shared.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'By being a part of nonio, you're choosing to support artists, musicians, writers, and creators of all types.'
The platform enables comment capability: 'Comment on posts' and 'Upvote and downvote comments'
Inferences
Support for 'creators of all types' without stated ideology restrictions suggests openness to diverse thought and conscience
Comment functionality enables expression of diverse viewpoints, though moderation approach is not explicitly detailed
The site enables community creation and participation. Community settings allow users to create and manage groups with moderation controls, supporting assembly and association.
FW Ratio: 33%
Observable Facts
The site includes community management features: 'Manage moderators, members, and bans in one place' and allows settings for 'Who can post?' and 'Who can comment?' with options including 'Paid Users Only' and 'Admins Only'
Inferences
Community creation and management tools enable freedom of association and assembly
Ability to restrict participation to paid members or admins may constrain associational freedom depending on implementation
The site frames upvoting as meaningful political/economic participation: 'When you're choosing to upvote a post, you're saying that this item is deserving of a slice of your pool of contribution.' This is described as requiring conscience and responsibility.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'When you're choosing to upvote a post, you're saying that this item is deserving of a slice of your pool of contribution. This means other things you've voted on will get a smaller percentage of your pool as well, so you have to vote with a conscience.'
The voting system directly allocates subscription funds: 'your subscription pool is divided evenly between everything you upvote that month'
Inferences
The voting system creates meaningful participatory governance where user choices directly shape resource allocation
The emphasis on voting 'with a conscience' frames participation as a responsibility, not just a feature
The site frames creator support as enabling social security: 'Nonio would be nothing without creators. The point of the platform is to fund their creativity.' This enables economic security for creative workers.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'Nonio would be nothing without creators. The point of the platform is to fund their creativity.'
The site provides financial withdrawal options: 'Funds in your wallet will auto-deposit into your Stripe Connect account at the end of each month' or manual withdrawal via 'Venmo, Cash App, Paypal, PayID, Bitcoin, Ethereum' or other methods
Inferences
The subscription funding model enables creators to access economic security through their work
Multiple withdrawal options support practical access to earned funds across geographic and banking contexts
The site enables creators to earn income, which contributes to their standard of living. Economic security is a precondition for maintaining adequate standards.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site enables creators to earn funds through the subscription system and access those funds through multiple withdrawal methods
Inferences
Creator compensation enables contributors to maintain or improve their economic standard of living through creative work
The site recognizes users as individuals capable of creating, commenting, and making choices ('you choose your subscription price'). Users have individual profiles with settings and content ownership.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site enables user accounts with individual settings, avatars, and descriptions
The site explicitly states: 'You own your content' and allows users to 'Choose your subscription price'
Inferences
Individual account creation and content ownership recognize users as distinct legal and moral persons
User choice over subscription price acknowledges individual agency and preferences
The site frames upvoting as requiring community responsibility: 'so you have to vote with a conscience. A picture of a cat may not be worthy of a percentage of your pool when you've previously voted up a high quality piece of investigative journalism.'
FW Ratio: 33%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'so you have to vote with a conscience. A picture of a cat may not be worthy of a percentage of your pool when you've previously voted up a high quality piece of investigative journalism.'
Inferences
The zero-sum voting mechanism encourages users to consider community welfare when making allocation decisions
The framing of voting as a moral responsibility emphasizes duty to the community
The site does not explicitly address non-discrimination, though it implies content-agnostic acceptance ('creators of all types'). Community settings allow moderation but no explicit anti-discrimination policy visible.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site states support for 'artists, musicians, writers, and creators of all types' without stated content restrictions
Community settings include role-based moderation (members, moderators, banned users) but no explicit non-discrimination policy is documented
Inferences
Breadth of supported creator types suggests non-discriminatory intent, though not explicitly guaranteed
Moderation tools exist but lack visible safeguards against discriminatory application
The site provides contact mechanisms ('Email: [email protected], Twitter: @pwnies') for user concerns, but remedies are informal and founder-dependent.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site states: 'If you need to contact us for any reason, ping Jacob at [email protected] or at @pwnies on Twitter'
The site acknowledges manual processes: 'Account deletion will be best effort when done manually' and 'I'll try and support whatever platforms I can to send money'
Inferences
Direct contact mechanism provides access to recourse, though informal and founder-dependent
Lack of formal appeal or dispute resolution structure limits effectiveness of remedy
The site supports educational content creation but does not explicitly emphasize education provision. Educational content is treated the same as other creator content.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site supports content from 'writers' and 'creators of all types,' which may include educational creators, but education is not a stated focus
Inferences
The platform enables educational content creation as one form of supported creativity
The site enables user movement between contexts (creator, commenter, browser) but does not explicitly address freedom of movement as a rights provision.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site enables user account creation and multi-role participation (Creator, Commenter, Supporter)
Inferences
Platform accessibility supports practical freedom of movement between roles and communities
Not directly addressed. Moderation and community settings exist but no explicit commitment to equal protection under community rules is stated.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The site states 'I will be deleting posts that are simple alert tests' as example of moderation but does not define broader moderation standards or appeal mechanisms
Inferences
Moderation exists but lacks explicit equal protection framework or due process
Multiple structural protections: Stripe handles payments (not stored on Non.io), passwords are bcrypt-hashed, server-side logging only (no frontend tracking), no third-party data sharing stated in privacy policy.
The platform enforces content ownership through account controls, storage of user-submitted content under user ownership, and contractual limitation on platform use (only thumbnails in promotions).
The platform is structurally designed to enable cultural participation: content submission, community feedback, financial support for creators, and visibility mechanisms (upvoting) all facilitate participation in cultural and scientific production.
The platform implements direct creator compensation through subscription allocation and monthly payouts. Each user's subscription funds creators based on their votes, establishing a fair wage mechanism.
Free tier ($0/mo) and paid tiers ($2-10/mo) enable participation regardless of economic status, making the right to equal dignity practically accessible.
Multiple expression mechanisms (posts, comments, voting) are implemented. Moderation exists ('I will be deleting posts that are simple alert tests') but broader editorial controls are not detailed.
Content submission tools and community discussion (comments) enable expression of diverse thoughts, though moderation standards and their application are not fully transparent.
Community creation tool, membership management, and moderation controls enable association. Restriction to 'Paid Users Only' or 'Admins Only' for posting/commenting may limit some forms of association.
Voting mechanism (upvote/downvote) allocates user funds to creators, creating a participatory decision-making structure where each user's choices shape platform outcomes.
The subscription system allocates funds to creators monthly and provides withdrawal mechanisms (Stripe, crypto, cash transfer, regional payment methods), enabling access to earned income.
The voting mechanism enforces conscience by making votes zero-sum (upvoting something means less goes to other items), encouraging thoughtful resource allocation.
build 1ad9551+j7zs · deployed 2026-03-02 09:09 UTC · evaluated 2026-03-02 11:31:12 UTC
Support HN HRCB
Each evaluation uses real API credits. HN HRCB runs on donations — no ads, no paywalls.
If you find it useful, please consider helping keep it running.