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Over the weekend, product manager and engineer Tom Redman announced on Twitter that he and two friends were launching Recipeasly, a website for those looking to collect online recipes without having to read the many words of the recipe’s creator. The site, he advertises, is “your favourite recipes except without the ads or life stories.”
Some personal news! ✨
Two friends and I created a new thing to fix online recipes https://t.co/3ZNkSV82Y5 - your favourite recipes except without the ads or life stories
Within three hours of his announcement, Redman tweeted that the new site “struck a chord,” though not the chord he and his co-creators were likely hoping for. The trope of cooking bloggers launching into long-winded, often personal introductions before sharing a recipe is enough of a widespread pet peeve that they surely thought their new tool would be useful and welcome. However, Redman was met by instant pushback from critics who immediately pointed out that Rec
BBC News
By Cristina Criddle
image copyrightGetty Images
A website that collates recipes from the internet has been taken down hours after it launched, following a backlash from food bloggers.
Recipeasly said it wanted to fix online recipes by removing ads and life stories when users imported external links.
But content creators criticised the platform for breaching copyright and accused it of stealing revenue.
The website was removed after a deluge of complaints on social media.
“We re sorry,” a message on the homepage reads.
Some personal news! ✨
Two friends and I created a new thing to fix online recipes https://t.co/3ZNkSV82Y5 - your favourite recipes except without the ads or life stories
news
Recipe website removed after food blogger backlash
A website that collates recipes from the internet has been taken down hours after it launched, following a backlash from food bloggers.
Recipeasly said it wanted to fix online recipes by removing ads and life stories when users imported external links.
But content creators criticised the platform for breaching copyright and accused it of stealing revenue.
The website was removed after a deluge of complaints on social media.
“We re sorry,” a message on the homepage reads. We have nothing but respect and admiration for the time, money and effort that go into creating great recipes & websites. We don t want to minimise the results for all that hard work.
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