If they don’t trust you, it’s their right, but then they should just not use the software, instead of writing this type of caustic comments. Poor form in my view.
If anything I am actually thankful to HN for the opportunity letting me show my work here. Negative comments are not really that big of an issue for me. I just wish they were generally clearer and more specific so that I can easily fix whatever needs to be fixed. Most of the complaints were simply related to the README while I was expecting and honestly hoping for critique for the architecture and internals of Octelium itself.
That is sort of the point of what you are considering “negative” comments. For clarity, my comment was advice on how you can improve the public persona of your project.
You seem to have pointed out but equally not registered that you identified exactly the issue: if your readme is filled with red flags, no one is going to invest their time (which is what you are asking for) looking at your code or trying it.
I completely understand as a developer how the “marketing” (readme) of a project may not seem that important or that it should be super accurate, and that it can be easy to fall into the pattern (as can be seen) of looking at every comment that brings voice to criticisms as being “negative”. You’re simply too close to the problem and are therefore only seeing the trees for the forest, while everyone is trying to tell you that you should probably remove the giant fence in front of the trees.
Thank you again. I meant by "negative" that they are critical as opposed to insulting. As I mentioned before in this thread, I usually don't find negative/critical comments offensive at all. Believe me, the last thing that I would want for an open source project that I have been working on for years now is to show it to people, especially technical people, with poor wording or hard-to-understand terms. That was never intentional by me. In fact, the reason that README is too long is that I wanted to explain all the features and use cases in detail while add additional links to the docs for those who want to understand more which probably made it even more overwhelming for those unfamiliar with zero trust architectures. I will definitely do my best to improve the README and docs with time as I get more honest feedback like in this thread. Thank you.
If these comments are “caustic” I’d recommend steering well clear of…the rest of the internet. These comments, from my perspective, represent a very pragmatic position from people who encounter scam bait daily in these same forums.
Should a user call people posting their software here state actors and the such? I really don’t think it helps anyone.
Rather, they should lay out thier points, suggest how the author could change their mind. Alternatively direct their warning to others if they feel their conviction that this is malware is unshakable.
If they don’t trust you, it’s their right, but then they should just not use the software, instead of writing this type of caustic comments. Poor form in my view.
Keep up, it looks amazing!!