Fiverr Stole 110+ Hours of My Work for $0 – Don’t Trust This Platform!
Fellow freelancers, I’m beyond furious and need to warn you about Fiverr. I poured 110+ hours into a coding project, only for Fiverr to cancel it all, leaving me with $0 while the client kept my work AND a domain I paid for. Here’s my horror story:
I took a $450 web dev project with two milestones. First milestone (HTML, JavaScript): fully done, approved by the client, 1000s of lines of clean code. Second milestone (styling): 80% done, but technical issues stopped me. I offered to refund the second part and handed over ALL files—code, docs, even a year-long domain I funded.
The client demanded a full refund, claiming it was “unusable” (despite approving the first milestone!). Fiverr sided with them, cancelling *everything*. I got nothing, and the client kept my work for free. I fought with support for weeks, sending evidence (code, screenshots). Their final excuse? The client “lost trust” and “didn’t want an incomplete project.” They claim the client can’t use my work per their policy, but there’s no enforcement—Fiverr just shrugs while I lose 110 hours and domain costs.
Even after my Trustpilot review, Fiverr doubled down, saying the cancellation is final because I couldn’t finish. They ignored that the first milestone was DONE and APPROVED. I’m done with Fiverr—they don’t care about freelancers. Your approved work can be erased if a client whines, and you’ll get nothing.
**Please share this to warn others!** Has anyone else been screwed by Fiverr? How do you avoid platforms that exploit freelancers? I have proof (screenshots, files) and can share privately. Let’s expose this unfair system!
**TL;DR**: Fiverr cancelled my 110-hour coding project ($450) after the client got my work and domain for free. Support ignored my evidence and protects clients over freelancers. Avoid Fiverr! #programming#technology#dev source
I published a paper on Medium recently that try's to understand the expansion of the universe in a new and potentially exciting way. I'll post the introduction below and a link to my paper. Thanks for reading, let me know what you think.
The nature of spacetime — its origin, structure, and relationship to light and matter — remains one of the deepest mysteries in modern physics. While General Relativity provides an elegant description of gravity as the curvature of spacetime, and quantum field theory describes the behavior of particles and fields on that backdrop, the two frameworks remain fundamentally incompatible.
The ongoing search for quantum gravity suggests that our most basic assumptions — about spacetime, information, and the vacuum itself — may need to be reimagined. In this paper, we propose a speculative yet conceptually coherent idea: that spacetime is not a fundamental entity but an emergent phenomenon, generated through the interaction of photons with the quantum vacuum. Specifically, we explore the possibility that in regions of extreme low-density — such as cosmic supervoids — photons do not merely travel through space but become part of space itself. They transform into what we call “negative information”: not a loss of knowledge, but a reconfiguration of potential, a seed of structure in the absence of measurement. This idea marks a shift in perspective.
Rather than viewing spacetime as a passive arena where particles play out their roles, we propose that spacetime is actively generated by the interaction of light and the quantum fabric it moves through. In this framework, matter gives rise to photons, photons generate local spacetime geometry, and spacetime curvature stabilizes and conditions the emergence of matter. It is a loop — not a linear chain — where each element (light, matter, geometry) recursively generates and sustains the others. Recent observations of accelerated expansion in regions of extremely low mass density — such as cosmic voids — provide a potential window into this process.
If these voids represent zones of minimal entanglement and maximal quantum potential, the behavior of light within them could reveal something profound: not only how the universe expands, but how it comes into being at all. In the following sections, we introduce the concept of “negative information” and lay out a framework for understanding photon-vacuum interactions as spacetime-generating events. We explore the implications of this framework for cosmology, the origin of the universe, and the nature of gravity itself. By rethinking the relationship between light, information, and spacetime, we may be on the brink of a deeper understanding of the cosmos — one where the fabric of spacetime is not a passive stage but an active participant in the unfolding story of the universe.