5/27/2026 at 4:36:08 PM
“Opt-in by default” is an oxymoron. If it’s default then I haven’t opted into anything. It’s been enabled by default.by JimDabell
5/27/2026 at 4:43:18 PM
This frustrates me too, if something is "opt-in", that means by default you're not included and can choose to be included. If something is "opt-out", that means you're included and can choose not to be.But then it gets used to describe the reverse, and we have to add words to clarify.
I once saw a post here with a correctly described opt-in telemetry before, and the top comment here was attacking them for the reverse, thinking it was including them by default, so there's little winning, it's one of those words that has just come to mean it's opposite.
by xnorswap
5/27/2026 at 9:28:00 PM
“Opt-in by default” is just Opt-out. We already have the term.by thundergolfer
5/27/2026 at 7:04:27 PM
They are opting you in by default. Very cool.by FeteCommuniste
5/27/2026 at 7:08:09 PM
Never miss opting in to newsletters again with NewsAI! NewsAI automatically opts you in to thousands of newsletters and marketing campaigns around the world in an instant!by burnte
5/27/2026 at 7:29:59 PM
But that's not the standard definition of "opt-in". See for instance MW: "to choose to do or be involved in something".by bachmeier
5/27/2026 at 7:59:01 PM
Yes, we know. It was sarcasm.by dolebirchwood
5/27/2026 at 4:54:47 PM
Isn't it kind of like mandatory tip? If you haven't given it voluntarily, i.e .its automatically opted-in and you maybe can't even not give it. its the same.by mannanj
5/27/2026 at 5:17:09 PM
Opt-in by default means it is either mandatory (if you can‘t disable it) or it‘s opt-out (if you can) Opt-In by default is BS to make it sound less invasiveby croes
5/27/2026 at 5:22:50 PM
Imagine if they said paying taxes were opt-in by default. No, it's mandatory! Sure you can technically not pay taxes but you won't have a good time.by abustamam
5/27/2026 at 5:39:59 PM
That is slightly different though. The government says you must pay taxes, mandatory as you said.PostHog here is saying they will train on your data but opting out is allowed. For the taxes analogy to work, PostHoh would not offer the opt-out option at all and you'd be doing something like hacking their system to filter your data out on their end.
by _heimdall
5/27/2026 at 5:21:18 PM
Many restaurants have the audacity to add a 20% (or whatever percentage) "service fee" that isn't considered tip. It even says something like "we use this to pay our staff competitive wages and health insurance." You can't opt out. It's just part of the bill. Then they have the gall to ask for a tip on top of that.I've taken to a) leaving a negative Google or yelp review for such establishments and b) never coming back. This is a practice that needs to die.
by abustamam
5/27/2026 at 5:30:04 PM
Do you leave a negative review if they add the service charge but don't ask for a tip?by rectang
5/27/2026 at 5:31:11 PM
I've never had the pleasure of encountering that situation.But at what point do we call a spade a spade and say it's just them secretly inflating their prices? "everything is a penny but we charge a 1000000% service charge"
by abustamam
5/27/2026 at 5:33:27 PM
I used to wait tables once upon a time and it was standard practice to add a fixed service charge for any large party in lieu of a tip. Have you really never encountered that?by rectang
5/27/2026 at 5:37:03 PM
I've encountered large party service charges and that makes sense because it usually requires staff to do stuff they wouldn't normally do for smaller parties.I'm talking about restaurants that just add service charge to everyone.
by abustamam
5/27/2026 at 6:04:28 PM
I think the lesson from the airline industry is that while consumers will get angry about surcharges, pricing transparency is what really gets punished in the marketplace. There are enough consumers who will always buy the deceptively priced item that it's suicidal to tell the truth (absent government regulation forcing the issue for all purveyors).There are a fair number of well-meaning restaurateurs who have tried no-tip policies for ethical reasons. But the mass marketplace has not changed.
by rectang
5/27/2026 at 8:58:15 PM
Kinda reminds me of when Burger King had a 1/3 lb burger and a 1/4 lb burger and more people bought the 1/4 lb because they thought it was more burger than the (rightfully) more expensive 1/3 lb burger.The average consumer can't do math.
by abustamam
5/27/2026 at 6:31:19 PM
[dead]by chrinic6391
5/27/2026 at 8:22:54 PM
I would. If it's mandatory just include it in the advertised food prices.by wtetzner
5/27/2026 at 5:23:04 PM
You were given the option to option in, by default. Clearly it makes sense, optioned out by default only happens when someone loses money on the option in default instead.The internet really stinks. The 1999 teenager in me somewhere is really bummed.
by irishcoffee
5/27/2026 at 4:38:06 PM
Very true. I was considering PostHog, but this sours them in my eyes. Very deceptive wording.by deflator
5/27/2026 at 5:10:18 PM
They could’ve done a lot worse, and most companies would’ve.by skrebbel
5/27/2026 at 5:20:04 PM
There's a helpful response. It could always be worse!by deflator
5/28/2026 at 2:40:27 PM
Okok what I meant was, too many companies would've hid this in a ToS update, and these guys actively market the change, and the worst crime we can accuse them of is using the wrong word for "enable". I agree that's not perfect, but I can totally imagine that if you use "opt-in" and "opt-out" a bit too much at work, esp as an analytics company deep in cookie law land, that "opted-in be default" sounds like a perfectly normal thing to say, ie I bet this is all not malice, just mild incompetence.by skrebbel
5/28/2026 at 3:28:49 AM
CEOs and the like speak Weasel and only use Weasel Words.by spl757