zlacker

[return to "Cursor IDE support hallucinates lockout policy, causes user cancellations"]
1. mntrue+1F4[view] [source] 2025-04-16 02:52:24
>>scared+(OP)
(Cursor cofounder)

Apologies - something very clearly went wrong here. We’ve already begun investigating, and some very early results:

* Any AI responses used for email support are now clearly labeled as such. We use AI-assisted responses as the first filter for email support.

* We’ve made sure this user is completely refunded - least we can do for the trouble.

For context, this user’s complaint was the result of a race condition that appears on very slow internet connections. The race leads to a bunch of unneeded sessions being created which crowds out the real sessions. We’ve rolled out a fix.

Appreciate all the feedback. Will help improve the experience for future users.

◧◩
2. SCdF+505[view] [source] 2025-04-16 06:46:54
>>mntrue+1F4
> * Any AI responses used for email support are now clearly labeled as such. We use AI-assisted responses as the first filter for email support.

Don't use AI. Actually care. Like, take a step back, and realise you should give a shit about support for a paid product.

Don't get me wrong: AI is a very effective tool, *for doing things you don't care about*. I had to do a random docker compose change the the other day. It's not production code, it will be very obvious whether or not AI output works, and I very rarely touch docker and don't care to become a super expert in it. So I prompted the change, and it was good enough and so I ran with it.

You using AI for support tells me that you don't care about support. Which tells me whether or not I should be your customer.

◧◩◪
3. throwa+db5[view] [source] 2025-04-16 08:29:04
>>SCdF+505
The amount paid is still pretty trivial. I wouldn’t expect much human support for most SaaS products costing $20 a month.
◧◩◪◨
4. thih9+w06[view] [source] 2025-04-16 14:35:31
>>throwa+db5
Support quality depends on how much the company wants to keep that particular user. There are companies with better support for cheaper products and companies with worse support for more expensive products.
[go to top]