Ask HN: VC-funded startup lurking in my community Slack – how to respond?

12 pointsposted 13 hours ago
by nduncan_hmc

Item id: 45829621

8 Comments

0_AkAsH_03

8 hours ago

Remove them! Plus post about them openly on social media.. it'll give more traction to your product, plus expose such behaviors by big companies.

bix6

12 hours ago

I think you need to make people sign up, agree to TOS that prohibits solicitation, document the bad behavior, take it to a lawyer and sue for damages.

You gotta trap them somehow and prove damages.

I’m not a lawyer though so just a guess.

nduncan_hmc

7 hours ago

Haha that would be satisfying, but I don't really have the time or money to spare on a court case. But they do.

phs318u

12 hours ago

Ban them? You haven't said but I assume the vendor's presence in the Slack is not disguised. Either way, it's your Slack and you're entitled to determine who is welcome and who isn't. You are under no obligation to be providing your competitors with a free channel and free leads.

nduncan_hmc

12 hours ago

Their presence is disguised. They're creating accounts using gmail addresses and fake names. Edited my post to make that clear.

phs318u

12 hours ago

Make a big deal about the shill/fake accounts. Educate people as to the benefits of your offering vs theirs and explain how even with their "free credits" offer, it's a poor alternative. I presume these offers are made in DM's? I'm not aware of any "forum" type software that allows admins to prohibit DM's.

nduncan_hmc

10 hours ago

They're actually googling people's names, seeing where they work, deducing their work email, and emailing them.

Looks slightly less shady than DMing them I guess.

csomar

3 hours ago

There isn't really much you can do about that. They'll find your customers one way or another (ie: GitHub stars, your packages, issues, etc.)

Don't worry about it and just focus on serving the customers you have.