| … or don't, if you think the Dark Forest hypothesis is likely to be true. --- Separately, and with the intention to help, not to be pedantic: The phrase How it works? is an immediate turn-off. Standard English phrasing is How does it work?. (By "standard" I mean that every native speaker I can imagine would say it this way, and no native speaker I can imagine would ever use the website's phrasing.) I often see the similar problem of using both how and like together, when either is acceptable, but not both. (Like typically requires what, not how.) Correct: How does it look? Correct: What does it look like? Incorrect: How does it look like? Sometimes the latter problem compounds the former one. Doubly incorrect: How it looks like? To me, a native English speaker, the incorrect constructions smack of "non-native Internet Englishes". A website/service must persuade me (and others) to look at it, let alone use it, so the copywriters should pay close attention to their rhetoric — and reading miscues are all but guaranteed to reduce persuasive power. |