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Product Hunt Kickbacks.ai

Get paid to wait for Claude Code to finish

233
Traction Score
13
Discussions
Jun 15, 2026
Launch Date
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Product Positioning & Context

Kickbacks.ai helps developers get paid for AI-agent wait states. Advertisers bid for a tiny sponsored status line; users get 50% of ad revenue.
Advertising Artificial Intelligence Development

Related Ecosystem & Alternatives

Discover adjacent products, open-source repositories, and developer tools sharing similar technical architecture.

Deep-Dive FAQs

What is Kickbacks.ai?
Kickbacks.ai is a digital product or tool described as: Get paid to wait for Claude Code to finish
Where did Kickbacks.ai originate?
Data for Kickbacks.ai was aggregated directly from the Product Hunt community ecosystem, representing raw developer and early-adopter sentiment.
When was Kickbacks.ai publicly launched?
The initial public indexing or launch date for Kickbacks.ai within our tracked developer communities was recorded on June 15, 2026.
How popular is Kickbacks.ai?
Kickbacks.ai has achieved measurable traction, logging over 233 traction score and facilitating 13 recorded discussions or engagements.
Which technical categories define Kickbacks.ai?
Based on metadata extraction, Kickbacks.ai is categorized under topics such as: Advertising, Artificial Intelligence, Development.
How does the creator describe Kickbacks.ai?
The original author or development team describes the product as follows: "Kickbacks.ai helps developers get paid for AI-agent wait states. Advertisers bid for a tiny sponsored status line; users get 50% of ad revenue."

Community Voice & Feedback

[Redacted] • Jun 16, 2026
The dead time angle is smart — waiting for Claude to compile is basically the new coffee break. My only concern is the same as others raised here: what data exactly gets sent to your servers during those sessions? A clear answer to that in the docs would probably convert a lot of fence-sitters. Rooting for you either way, clever niche.
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
Just curious what ‘personal’ data are they gonna collect to make the ads ‘personalised’
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
The wait state being monetizable is a clever reframe. You're paying for that idle time regardless, so turning it into a revenue split actually fits how agent workflows already feel. Curious how you keep the sponsored line from getting visually noisy when someone's mid-task.
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
I've had this running for a few days and it seems that after the first day the earnings are severely nerfed? The first day I ran this for a couple of hours which made 5.40 USD for 514 events, which was pretty promising. A few days later I've ran this for a whole day, and I earned 0.43 USD over 1587 events, which seems like the app is just going to make it harder for me to earn the closer I get to the 10 USD cash out threshold. I don't know if the extension has worked for anyone since I haven't seen anyone cash out yet, and even though its "free money" the extension requires constant baby sitting, asking me to reload the window or sign in again and again. Are you guys having an incident or something or do the earnings just tank after the first day?
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
This is a fantastic idea. I ran CodeFund (previously Code Sponsor) a handful of years back in an effort to fund OSS. Advertisers would pay top dollar knowing that they were getting their products in front of their exact target market.Running an advertising company is difficult, especially when it comes to these types of audiences. As much as I hope this project succeeds, it's going to be a huge challenge if you plan on the developer retaining privacy.For reference, see ethicalads.io and how they manage to balance privacy with advertising data.
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
Great idea, but it seems I have to auth the vscode extension via Google even if I have registered with some other email address. So I am not able to use it except with email addresses that are not tied to any Google account?Oh, also my Claude Code CLI is running on an external host (dedicated Debian machine), I am connected via SSH from my vscode at home. I get a lot of timeout and other messages.After 3 times reloading the window and signing in Kickback is now "green"!
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
Clever and slightly surreal market: monetizing agent wait states. I like the 50/50 revenue share. How are you thinking about keeping sponsored status lines useful to developers rather than just another ad surface?
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
It made me think.. why isnt it a thing like in all software products?? For instance we can put Ads in the free space of every OS toolbar
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
Honestly love the cheekiness of this, "get paid to wait" is a great hook :)One thing I'm curious about on the technical side: since the integration lives in the status line, it gets the JSON payload Claude Code passes on every refresh (model, current working dir, session info...). To serve and attribute ads you presumably phone home pretty often.So my real question is around privacy: what exactly does the status line script send to your servers? Do project paths / workspace dirs ever leave the machine, or is it stripped down to an anonymous impression ping? For folks working under NDA or on sensitive code, that's the make or break detail.Not a gotcha, genuinely rooting for the idea, just think being upfront about the data flow would build a lot of trust here. Congrats on the launch!
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
This is a hilariously brilliant idea. Watching Claude Code spin or waiting for massive agent loops to finish is the new "waiting for code to compile". Flipping that dead time into an ad-supported revenue stream is incredibly clever.Out of curiosity, how does the integration work under the hood? Is it injected as a custom terminal reporter or an environment wrapper? Looking forward to trying this out!
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
This seems like a troll idea, but SUPRISIGLY good.I think the next piece of validation is "what does a dev do when they're waiting for Claude". Because a lot of people I know (eg. me) just start doomscrolling or clicking around testing bugs on their product or whatever they're building.Good luck Gabe, congrats!
[Redacted] • Jun 15, 2026
This is a funny but surprisingly logical idea. Developers already spend a lot of time watching agents think, so turning that dead time into something opt-in and revenue-sharing makes sense.

Discovery Source

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Deep Research & Science

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