I get what you're saying, but looking at some examples, they look kinda of right, but there are a lot of misleading facts sprinkled, making his grading wrong. It is useful, but I'd suggest to be careful to use this to make decisions.
Some of the issues could be resolved with better prompting (it was biased to always interpret every comment through the lens of predictions) and LLM-as-a-judge, but still. For example, Anthropic's Deep Research prompts sub-agents to pass original quotes instead of paraphrasing, because it can deteriorate the original message.
Some examples:
Swift is Open Source (2015)
===========================
sebastiank123 got a C-, and was quoted by the LLM as saying:
> “It could become a serious Javascript competitor due to its elegant syntax, the type safety and speed.”
Now, let's read his full comment:
> Great news! Coding in Swift is fantastic and I would love to see it coming to more platforms, maybe even on servers. It could become a serious Javascript competitor due to its elegant syntax, the type safety and speed.
I don't interpret it as a prediction, but a desire. The user is praising Swift. If it went the server way, perhaps it could replace JS, to the user's wishes. To make it even clearer, if someone asked the commenter right after: "Is that a prediction? Are you saying Swift is going to become a serious Javascript competitor?" I don't think its answer would be 'yes' in this context.
How to be like Steve Ballmer (2015)
===================================
Most wrong
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> corford (grade: D) (defending Ballmer’s iPhone prediction):
> Cited an IDC snapshot (Android 79%, iOS 14%) and suggested Ballmer was “kind of right” that the iPhone wouldn’t gain significant share.
> In 2025, iOS is one half of a global duopoly, dominates profits and premium segments, and is often majority share in key markets. Any reasonable definition of “significant” is satisfied, so Ballmer’s original claim—and this defense of it—did not age well.
Full quote:
> And in a funny sort of way he was kind of right :) http://www.forbes.com/sites/dougolenick/2015/05/27/apple-ios...
> Android: 79% versus iOS: 14%
"Any reasonable definition of 'significant' is satisfied"? That's not how I would interpret this. We see it clearly as a duopoly in North America. It's not wrong per se, but I'd say misleading. I know we could take this argument and see other slices of the data (premium phones worldwide, for instance), I'm just saying it's not as clear cut as it made it out to be.
> volandovengo (grade: C+) (ill-equipped to deal with Apple/Google):
>
> Wrote that Ballmer’s fast-follower strategy “worked great” when competitors were weak but left Microsoft ill-equipped for “good ones like Apple and Google.”
> This is half-true: in smartphones, yes. But in cloud, office suites, collaboration, and enterprise SaaS, Microsoft became a primary, often leading competitor to both Apple and Google. The blanket claim underestimates Microsoft’s ability to adapt outside of mobile OS.
That's not what the user was saying:
> Despite his public perception, he's incredibly intelligent. He has an IQ of 150.
>
> His strategy of being a fast follower worked great for Microsoft when it had crappy competitors - it was ill equipped to deal with good ones like Apple and Google.
He was praising him and he did miss opportunities at first. OC did not make predictions of his later days.
[Let's Encrypt] Entering Public Beta (2015)
===========================================
- niutech: F "(endorsed StartSSL and WoSign as free options; both were later distrusted and effectively removed from the trusted ecosystem)"
Full quote:
> There are also StartSSL and WoSign, which provide the A+ certificates for free (see example WoSign domain audit: https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/analyze.html?d=checkmyping.c...)
>
> pjbrunet: F (dismissed HTTPS-by-default arguments as paranoid, incorrectly asserted ISPs had stopped injection, and underestimated exactly the use cases that later moved to HTTPS)
Full quote:
> "We want to see HTTPS become the default."
>
> Sounds fine for shopping, online banking, user authorizations. But for every website? If I'm a blogger/publisher or have a brochure type of website, I don't see point of the extra overhead.
>
> Update: Thanks to those who answered my question. You pointed out some things I hadn't considered. Blocking the injection of invisible trackers and javascripts and ads, if that's what this is about for websites without user logins, then it would help to explicitly spell that out in marketing communications to promote adoption of this technology. The free speech angle argument is not as compelling to me though, but that's just my opinion.
I thought the debate was useful and so did pjbrunet, per his update.
I mean, we could go on, there are many others like these.