True. Especially indie game awards. That have the least resources available and most like would benefit most from some use of AI. At that scale often even reasonably paid game developers are expensive.
The funny thing is that if you ask Claude if you should use email address as a primary key it will pretty adamantly warn you away from it:
> I'd recommend against using email as the primary key for a large LLM chat website. Here's why:
> Problems with email as primary key:
> 1. Emails change - Users often want to update their email addresses. With email as PK, you'd need to cascade updates across all related tables (chat sessions, messages, settings, etc.), which is expensive and error-prone
Well it does eliminate a whole list of problems related to account takeover, account recovery workflows, legal questions regarding which email owns the data, etc. Sometimes less is more. Secure, reliable, simple.
If anything, this makes account takeover and account recovery way more difficult. It probably makes a bunch of legal stuff easier for them, but that’s about it.
That's pretty obvious to anyone who had to maintain a high traffic site. Just the tip of the iceberg (I haven't included additional legal issues and other):
1.1 Strong protection against account takeover
Email change is one of the most abused recovery vectors in account takeover (ATO).
Eliminating email changes removes:
Social-engineering attacks on support
SIM-swap → email-change chains
Phished session → email swap → lockout of real user
Attacker must compromise the original inbox permanently, which is much harder.
1.2 No “high-risk” flows
Email change flows are among the highest-risk product flows:
Dual confirmation emails
Cooldown periods
Rollback windows
Manual reviews
Fixed email removes an entire class of security-critical code paths.
1.3 Fewer recovery attack surfaces
No need for:
“I lost access to my email” flows
Identity verification uploads
Support-driven ownership disputes
Every recovery mechanism is an attack surface; removing them reduces risk.
You're very wrong, because account takeover can still happen due to a compromised email account. People can and do permanently lose access to their email account to a third party.
Having worked in security on a fairly high profile, highly visible, largely used product — one of the fundamental decisions that paid off very well was intentionally including mechanisms to prevent issues with other businesses (like Google) from impacting user abilities for us.
Not having email change functionality would have been a huge usability, security, and customer service nightmare for us.
Regardless of anything else, not enabling users to change their email address effectively binds them to business with a single organization. It also ignores the fact that people can and do change emails for entirely opaque reasons from the banal to the authentically emergent.
ATO attacks are a fig leaf for such concerns, because you, as an organization, always have the power to revert a change to contact information. You just need to establish a process. It takes some consideration and table topping, but it’s not rocket science for a competent team.
What logical fallacy, exactly? I think you're perhaps misunderstanding the conversation. This translates just fine to your proposed analogy.
In your analogy, the claim would be that some online account is tied to a laptop and whoever possesses the laptop has access to that account. The online service does not permit the account owner to revoke access from that laptop and move the account to a different laptop. I stand by my statement that this would be a serious security hazard. Because yes, laptops can and do get hacked or stolen, just like email addresses.
Where your analogy isn't quite as strong is that at least you can generally add additional anti-theft protections such as full-disk encryption to a laptop, while with an email account generally 2FA is the best you can do.
> Attacker must compromise the original inbox permanently, which is much harder
This may need further analysis. I'd guess that a significant fraction of the people that want to change the email address that identifies them to a service want to do so because they have a new email address that they are switching to.
Many of those will be people who lose access to the old email address after switching. For example people who were using an email address at their ISP's domain who are switching ISPs, or people who use paid email hosting without a custom domain and are switching to a different email provider.
A new customer of that old provider might then be able to get that old address. You'd think providers would obviously never allow addresses used by former customers to be reused, but nope, some do. Even some that you'd expect to not do so, such as mailbox.org [1] and fastmail.com, allow addresses to be recycled.
the human created slop is unbeleavably huge, where?, how?, what is the motivation?, how do they sustain whatever mental state required to produce this stuff, and still be able to feed themselves?
it is clearly highly competitive, and veers and careens to new trends and concepts on a second by second basis, and very occasionaly I meet one of the consumers of such energetic work, but can in no way relate to or understand the blurring of reality with wild fantasy.
The U.S. joint venture will be 50% held by a consortium of new investors, including Oracle, Silver Lake and MGX with 15% each; 30.1% held by affiliates of certain existing investors of ByteDance; and 19.9% will be retained by ByteDance
Feels a lot like friends helping each other to pieces of a pie.
IMO it’s less about success but a lack of reliable safety nets. Absent a good supporting environment, what choice does an individual have than to maximise their own outcome.
Not just safety nets, but the disappearance of the middle class at least in the US. It increasingly feels like people either make twice or more what they need to live, or half what they need to live.
I can absolutely see why parents see the way things are, try to extrapolate out another 20 or 30 years, and feel like they have to make sure their child is in the "well-to-do" group. It feels like the days are gone where you could be an average performer at an average job and live an okay life.
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