The Disqus website commenting system is no longer free, (as in beer).
When it comes to managing comments on a website, the free options include WordPress (and other native comment systems), Facebook comments, and [until recently] Livefyre (now owned by Adobe).
You also used to be able to use Disqus for free, but that changed this past week when the company started telling websites that use Disqus that they had to either sign up for the paid service or turn on the Disqus ads.
[...] Disqus offered clear benefits over the default WordPress comment system, including support for threaded comments, upvotes, spam detection (which clearly doesn't always work), comment moderation tools.
At the time Disqus was also completely free for most publishers. Over the years Disqus has rolled out a few different monetization options. Larger publishers can pay for premium features, and all sites can opt-in to Disqus ads, which can appear above or in the middle of the comments sections.
Starting later this week, all publishers using Disqus will have to either enable ads or pay for a subscription.
I honestly don't know which would be worse: advertisements, or websites currently using Disqus switching to Facebook comments.
Also at Liliputing.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by maxwell demon on Friday January 27 2017, @09:05AM
Complete with your own vulnerabilities? Most people are not qualified to write it on their own. Not because they could not get it working, but because they would not know how to make it secure.
What most people should rather do is to use a local installation of existing, well-maintained software to provide comments.
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 27 2017, @09:47AM
If they never attempt to in the first place they will never learn how to write secure code and become reliant on others to do their work for them and implicitly trust those to do their job properly. A homebrew system may have vulnerability but it will not fall victim to the kind of automated rooting that happens when a vuln shows up in a popular system/framework.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 27 2017, @12:32PM
Pffttbbtt. Cyka blyat!