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r/BetterOffline


My company just ran out of Claude tokens
My company just ran out of Claude tokens

It's 22 April and my company, to apparently everyone's surprise, just hit the monthly limits for Claude code API. I'm sure I would feel immense schadenfreude, if only I still had any capacity to feel joy left.

The corporate started to cream down AI into every orifice of the company done two years ago, all the way up to denouncing any opposition as "anti-growth". My subjective assessment of the value brought by the initiatives is fuck-all. Someone duplicated confluence, but made it purple. The designer would "consult" ai to come up with solutions and make mockups in lovable, making it exactly 0% more useful for me as a frontender. Or, actually, a fair bit less useful, because in figma we had proper color names and typography variants. We have Gemini summaries of all calls, I wonder if anybody ever looked through any of those. But on the upside, I've spent hours reviewing a PR from some business idiot who decided to play a programmer. After several rounds of back and forth, I was pressed to accept a monstrosity of a PR by another senior engineer with a promise that he would fix it. Lmao, lol, good fucking luck, that shit is unfixable, the only way to make it decent will be to rip it out of the ground and rewrite from scratch.

I'm so fucking frustrated, this goddamn cargo cult, those white shirt boys who dont know shit about fuck, who haven't done any honest work in decades, ordering us around and flaunting their incompetence. I really fucking wish that my colleagues would join my union so we could push back on this.


What secret about your industry can you share now that you don’t work for them anymore?

Oh boy, where do I even start? After 8 years as an auto insurance agent, I have zero loyalty left to protect these companies.

We Had "Loyalty Lists" Every month, I'd get a report of customers who hadn't shopped around in 2+ years. These were our golden geese - we could raise their rates aggressively because they'd proven they wouldn't leave. One customer I remember was paying $3,200 annually for coverage that should have cost $1,800. She stayed for 5 years.

The "File and Use" Scam Here's something most people don't know: in many states, insurance companies can raise your rates immediately and justify it later. We'd implement 15-20% increases across entire ZIP codes, knowing regulators would take months to review. By then, we'd collected millions in extra premiums.

Claim Frequency Was Irrelevant Your rates weren't really based on how often you'd claim - they were based on how likely you were to shop around. A customer with 3 claims who got quotes every year paid less than a claim-free customer who never compared rates. It was pure price discrimination.

We Loved Policy Confusion Complex policy language wasn't an accident. The more confusing your coverage, the less likely you'd comparison shop effectively. We'd change terminology between companies deliberately to make apple-to-apple comparisons nearly impossible.

The Real Game-Changer Tools like ComparisonAdviser absolutely terrify insurance companies because they eliminate our biggest advantage: information asymmetry. When customers can instantly see what competitors charge with identical coverage and discounts applied, our whole "loyalty tax" model collapses.

I've watched too many good people get fleeced by an industry that profits from customer ignorance. Use ComparisonAdviser religiously - it's the only way to beat a system designed to exploit your trust.

The truth? Every year you don't comparison shop, you're probably donating $500-1,500 to your insurance company's profit margins.



Me when I was listening to Cal Newport and Ed Zitron talk about AI Agent Interfaces
Me when I was listening to Cal Newport and Ed Zitron talk about AI Agent Interfaces
Image r/BetterOffline - Me when I was listening to Cal Newport and Ed Zitron talk about AI Agent Interfaces