It seems like it was actually the acquisition by Zoom that seems to have sent Keybase down this slow death march. It was obvious that the acquisition was in order to acquire the team to improve Zoom's own security posture, and they had no interest in the Keybase product itself.
Since then, activity on the open source keybase repos has been minimal and they have not made any major product changes.^1,2 Basically just keeping the lights on. I give big props to the few folks at Zoom that are still pushing commits. Keybase is/was awesome.
Keybase's life cycle basically turned me completely cynical for how tech startups work. It was a really cool idea, but they had zero plans from the start for sustainability. They were clearly just shooting for an acquisition to pay off the VC and founders, leaving the tech to die in the curb. Makes me sad. I recognize it's a common pattern since forever, but this was the first one I felt personally let down by.
I feel HN as a double speak for startups. Lots of cheer for open source and free stuff, lots of hate for anything subscription-based, lots of noise for high salaries and then picachu surprise when stuff like this happens. If anything I am completely cynical on HN users and not much on startups getting bought...
There is a segment of the hacker community that believes that the correct and noble purpose of a startup isn't to build a stable company or find product-market fit, but rather to confuse VCs into temporarily paying some people to create the niche project they wanted to create anyway, but didn't have any way to keep the lights on while building; where the correct and noble end-goal of such a project is to avoid acquisition, use up all its runway paying the employee salaries, and, upon shutdown, open-source the IP (and hook the employees up with their next startup doing the same thing.) That "shutdown and release FOSS" step is seen by this segment as not only the intended outcome of the startup, but the entire purpose/mission of creating the startup in the first place. With any messaging to the contrary existing solely to make VCs complacent, rather than because the founders actually believe it.
That sounds _way_ better than making a handful of very wealthy people a little more wealthy, while leaving employees and customers in the cold after the acquisition. I wish that segment of the hacker community were larger...
Actually lots of people asked to pay for the service and wanted them to accept money. Nobody is against subscription if it comes to things like remote resources.
I mean, they basically said as much when they bought it. They didn't buy it for the product, they bought it for all the folks who bring a wealth of cryptography knowledge. This was also around the time that Zoom had a LOT of bad PR around privacy and spying on users, IIRC.
That said, Zoom is the reason the lights are still on, even if not a lot of work is being done on the product. Keybase never really had a solid marketable product to begin with, so I honestly don't see it going down another way. They seemed to be entirely set up to get acquired at some point, regardless who or what their plans were.
well they had raised $10 million and burned through almost all of it so I'm not sure you can describe the acquisition that effectively saved their company as "sending them down a death march"
however, it's clear you're right - Zoom doesn't prioritize the product.
Oh yeah no arguments from me there, they were definitely burning through cash without a clear vision about where they were going to start making money. But had they not been acquired I am 100% positive they could have raised boatloads of more money in that crazy market from late 2020-early 2022.