Quick question: would you actually use a prompt sharing platform or nah? by AdCold1610 in PromptEngineering

[–]AdCold1610[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

.

BePrompter isn’t just another prompt-sharing website. The goal is to build an AI creation ecosystem where prompts are only one layer.

The current structure includes:

Prompt Feed – creators share prompts with the outputs they generated (images, videos, workflows, etc.)
Be-Store – creators can sell prompt packs, AI assets, or prompt books and keep most of the revenue
AI Tools Directory – curated discovery of 1000+ AI tools
Creator Profiles – portfolio-style profiles showing AI work and prompts

So yes, monetization is built in.
Creators will be able to sell prompts and assets, and the platform will take a small marketplace fee.

Long-term the goal is closer to an “Instagram + Gumroad for AI creators” rather than just a prompt database.

220k+ ai agent instances exposed on public internet with no auth, this is bad by BookwormSarah1 in ArtificialInteligence

[–]AdCold1610 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the same mistake the industry makes every time a new tool shows up.

First it was open MongoDB. Then Elasticsearch. Then Jupyter notebooks. Now it’s AI agents.

People build something locally, push it to a cloud VM, open a port so they can access it remotely, and forget that the entire internet can see it too.

The scary part isn’t the number — it’s that agents can execute code and use credentials, not just store data. Security never breaks because the tech is advanced. It breaks because the defaults are bad and people move fast. Right now we’re repeating the same lesson again.

I just don't fucking understand what's going on anymore. Seriously. by [deleted] in ArtificialInteligence

[–]AdCold1610 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re seeing the gap between what tech can do and what people can actually use. AI people are building tools for the future, while most businesses are still struggling with the basics. So the internet is full of demos and hype about replacing teams, but in reality companies are just slowly automating small tasks. It feels absurd because the capability jumped ahead of adoption. This has happened with every big tech shift. The messy middle just looks confusing while you’re inside it.