- PPF Points
- 2,888
selling trading bots or peddling signals and subscriptions? Totally doable—people are desperate for shortcuts in the trading game, it’s wild. Everybody’s hoping for that magic bullet, even though, let’s be real, the markets chew up most folks and spit them out. But here’s where it gets tricky: trust. You’re basically saying, “Yup, my bot’s smarter than you and it’ll work in all these crazy market conditions.” That’s a tall order, man. Most sellers totally underestimate how much hand-holding, transparency, and plain old honesty people want before they throw cash at you. No track record? Shaky communication? Folks bail faster than you can say “backtest.”
As for making actual money—there’s a million ways to slice it. Some devs sell bots like boxed software, one-and-done, but subscriptions for signals or managed accounts are where I’d put my chips. Why? Recurring revenue, baby. Plus, you’ve gotta keep users happy, so you’re forced to keep tweaking your stuff and actually, you know, care. It’s not just a fire-and-forget situation. Downside? You’re on the hook for updates, support, and probably running some sort of Discord or Telegram group so your users don’t turn on you. Way more work than just dumping code on the internet, but the loyalty and feedback you get? Actually worth it.
And, oh boy, people always forget the legal and ethical minefield. This isn’t just about slinging some clever Python script—there’s paperwork, disclaimers, rules about what you can promise. Step over the line, and suddenly you’re in hot water with regulators. My take? If you’re not screaming about the risks and setting realistic expectations, you’re playing with fire. The last thing anyone needs is some angry mob—or, worse, lawyers—because you hyped up your magic algorithm too much. Honestly, keeping that balance between ambition and honesty is the real boss fight here.
So tell me—where do you think most folks drop the ball, ethically speaking, when they try to cash in on trading bots?
As for making actual money—there’s a million ways to slice it. Some devs sell bots like boxed software, one-and-done, but subscriptions for signals or managed accounts are where I’d put my chips. Why? Recurring revenue, baby. Plus, you’ve gotta keep users happy, so you’re forced to keep tweaking your stuff and actually, you know, care. It’s not just a fire-and-forget situation. Downside? You’re on the hook for updates, support, and probably running some sort of Discord or Telegram group so your users don’t turn on you. Way more work than just dumping code on the internet, but the loyalty and feedback you get? Actually worth it.
And, oh boy, people always forget the legal and ethical minefield. This isn’t just about slinging some clever Python script—there’s paperwork, disclaimers, rules about what you can promise. Step over the line, and suddenly you’re in hot water with regulators. My take? If you’re not screaming about the risks and setting realistic expectations, you’re playing with fire. The last thing anyone needs is some angry mob—or, worse, lawyers—because you hyped up your magic algorithm too much. Honestly, keeping that balance between ambition and honesty is the real boss fight here.
So tell me—where do you think most folks drop the ball, ethically speaking, when they try to cash in on trading bots?

