We made, you decide.
Q: I cannot submit a pull request. A: Pull requests are not accepted. Full stop.
Q: Please add this feature. A: The Extensions API and its documentation are ready. Build it yourself, or tell your AI agent "read https://github.com/eauesque/yu_ai_manager and create an extension." Come back when you can manage that much.
Q: There is a bug. Please fix it. A: Paste the log into a GitHub issue. I might look at it when I feel like it. Hand the error log to an AI agent if you want it fixed now — it will be faster than waiting for me. Either way, your problem is yours to solve.
Q: I do not understand the specifications. A: Do not lie. Every piece of documentation is already there. Read it. Let the AI read it for you if you cannot. Grow a little and come back if even that is too much.
Q: I do not even know what I do not know. A: Browse the manual idly, or just think about it loosely. Something might come to mind.
Q: Please provide support. A: We made, you decide. Are you confused about something?
Q: I am in trouble unless you fix it. A: Then be in trouble. Your inconvenience and my labour are separate matters. Come back with something to offer. That is how the world works.
Q: Will you do it if I offer something in return? A: Not if it is not worth the effort. Obviously.
Q: Fix it now! A: Are you a beggar or an outlaw? Learn to say "Would it be possible to..." before making requests. Did they not teach you that in school?
Q: This is irresponsible. A: We made, you decide. It has said so from the start. You are the one who did not read it.
Q: This software caused damage. It is the fault of the recklessly irresponsible author. A: No, it is not. You chose to use software that said author built on the side. We made, you decide.
Q: It is your fault I failed. A: Do not blame others for what you did. Blame yourself if you have regrets. Accept responsibility for your own decisions — you will find peace in that.
Q: The community should decide. Development policy should be discussed by everyone. A: Did they not teach you the concept of property rights in school? Roads are open to everyone, but they belong to the government — not to you. Copyright remains with the author; you are merely granted a licence to use it. You are, in fact, using the software free of charge, with no transactional relationship whatsoever. An insect has no authority over the architecture. Bring a legal basis for your claim to influence the design. Come back when you have one. Until then, use it or do not.
Q: Listen to the users. A: Are you a paying client? No, you are not. There is no obligation to entertain demands from someone with no transactional relationship. Fork it and run your own project. That is what the MIT licence means. The only choices granted to you are: use it, do not use it, or fork it.
Q: Will you create a discussion forum or community? A: No. It is not sustainable. A person with a day job has no capacity to run a community on top of everything else.
Q: I do not like the development policy. A: Noted. Fork it. End of discussion.
Q: Is this not a licence violation? A: Check before you speak. Read THIRD_PARTY_LICENSES.txt. Bring a lawyer if you still have something to say. I am prepared.
Q: Does open source not belong to everyone? A: Look up what "public" means. Roads, parks, and libraries are open to everyone, but the owner is the government — not you. "Public" means "the owner manages it while granting broad access," not "ownership belongs to an unspecified multitude." Open source is the same. Copyright remains with the author; you are merely granted a licence to use it. Using something and owning it are different things. Study a little law and come back if you cannot tell the difference.
Q: This should be run more democratically. A: Plato settled this 2,400 years ago in The Republic. Democracy degenerates into mob rule in the name of freedom. There is no basis for the assumption that an ignorant majority produces correct decisions. Even Aristotle considered it one of the most dangerous forms of government to entrust governance to those without the capacity to judge.
Am I a philosopher-king? No — a self-declared fool. Yet this project has come this far. The project dissolves if my judgment turns out to be wrong, and so it goes. At least the locus of responsibility is clear.
Democracy is merely a tool for people who happen to face the same direction to reach temporary agreement. Read 2,400 years of political philosophy and come back if you mistake it for a permanent governing principle of a community. This is my project. It is not your village. Everyone's business is no one's business — history makes it abundantly clear what a committee with diffused responsibility has produced.
Q: You are cold. A: Every line of code in this software was written by an AI. The human only gave instructions and complaints. Which means you can build it too. You can do it. Go for it.
Q: You are scary. A: It is far better to be feared than to be liked.
Q: Do you not feel any pity? A: I do. For that greed and the eagerness to exploit. Have a glass of red wine tonight in that pitch-black cavern of yours and think it over slowly. Cheers.
Q: Please help me. A: Everyone seeks salvation, but think carefully about who is the only one who can actually save you. Support may arrive if you endure long enough, but you must endure until it does — and understand that it may never come. Even for a helicopter to find you, you have to write SOS or raise a Y-signal yourself. Decide to wait if you are going to wait. Decide not to move if you are not going to move. Drifting without deciding is the worst thing you can do.
Q: I went out, tried, came back to the cave, and nobody believes what I am saying. A: That is how it has always been. Do not go back to the cave. Start travelling instead.
Q: I submitted an issue in my language but got no response. A: Bug reports on GitHub are handled in English only. Discussions are closed — only bug reports are accepted. Write in English or do not expect a reply.
Q: I wrote an emotional appeal / rant in the issue tracker. Will the developer reconsider? A: Bug reports are read and responded to by an AI agent, not by a human. Emotional rhetoric, guilt-tripping, and social pressure tactics are wasted on a language model. State the technical facts clearly in English, or receive no meaningful response.
Q: Why does this software use Danbooru tags? A: Danbooru tags are the de facto standard for AI-generated image tagging. Virtually every major image generation model — Stable Diffusion, NovelAI, and countless LoRAs — was trained on datasets tagged with Danbooru conventions. This software uses them because they are the standard, not because of any affiliation with or endorsement of the Danbooru project itself. If you have a problem with the tagging system, take it up with the entire AI image generation ecosystem, not with this tool.
Q: macOS says the app is from an unidentified developer and refuses to open it. A: Correct. Code signing costs money. This is free software. Right-click the app, select Open, and click Open again in the dialog. You will only need to do this once. If that is too much to manage, find a way to pay for the certificate yourself.
Q: Windows Defender SmartScreen blocks the installer. A: Expected. SmartScreen reputation is built by usage volume, not by competence. Click "More info" then "Run anyway." If you cannot trust your own judgment on that, perhaps stay with software that holds your hand.