the $8 closed wrapper guy is mad that a free, open source agent ships with too many skills. skills that toggle off in two clicks, individually or by category, and you knew that going in.
so "every user is forced to have a polymarket skill" was never true. it was a config preference. you could've toggled it in five seconds, or if you think the defaults are wrong, opened a PR, the code's right there. you did neither, you turned it into a public shit pile on to farm a thread.
the funny part is you're calling an open, readable, PR-able agent "bad at feedback" from behind t3 chat, the closed $8 proxy that runs on other people's models, hides its own caps, and that you won't even open source, you ran a cloneathon so strangers would build the open version for you.
in hermes agent i read the skill, switch it off, or fix it. in t3 i can't see a single line. which one's actually built for the user?
you didn't review hermes agent. you reviewed yourself.
@oops4041555 Exactly nothing else does what jellyfin does in a free accessible platform, and even then jellyfins plugin system opens it up even further
A fresh Brave install in 2026: sponsored ad wallpapers on new tab page by default (opt out). Brave VPN, News, Talk, Leo (AI), Rewards and other revenue-milking bloat is advertised/pinned by default. Analytics and "phoning home" by default. Google as default search engine in most regions by default. Sponsored search engines like Russian Yandex in CIS countries by default: https://t.co/nCK7ZErytG
Brave has an ad branch that handles advertising within the browser: https://t.co/EwJwKKgWxq. Brave does on-device ad targeting based on cohorts and interests, just like what Chrome used to do and what Google was largely hated for (remember FLoC?). This applies to additional (opt-in) rewarded ads, shipped as part of Brave.
Brave has injected referral IDs to crypto-related URLs entered into the omnibox in the past, intentionally, by design:
https://t.co/hovGMDz8Et
https://t.co/3wdWDEV85H
https://t.co/fo1mD75vAF
Brave also uses dark patterns to drive users away from turning off ads in their browser. For example, an article linked from the "opt out" button in the browser has a wall of text making excuses for ads before the actual steps needed to be taken to disable them: https://t.co/dka1EIMtbw
kind of hypocritical for brave to judge firefox for lesser bullshit, don't you think?