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epolanski 6 days ago

You're misinterpreting the role of the vote/downvote button I fear.

The upvote/downvote should serve the utility of promoting/suppressing relevant/irrelevant content to the discussion. It's a "vote what's relevant", not "vote what you agree on" button.

Also, if you disagree with someone you can just move on, you don't have to answer.

From HN's guidelines:

> Users should vote and comment when they run across something they personally find interesting—not for promotion.

From Reddit's Reddiquette:

> If you think something contributes to conversation, upvote it. If you think it doesn't contribute to the community it's posted in or is off-topic in a particular community, downvote it.

AuryGlenz 6 days ago | parent | next [-]

Sure, but when everyone else uses the upvote/downvote button that way it doesn’t matter how you personally use it. The end result is anything that goes against the hivemind gets suppressed.

I’ve had fully scientifically sourced rebukes of things (effectively, straight up facts) get downvoted to oblivion on Reddit. Hundreds or thousands of people didn’t see that their preconceived notions were probably wrong. It’s no wonder politics has become more insular.

HN is better than most, thankfully.

diggan 6 days ago | parent [-]

> HN is better than most, thankfully.

Indeed. Sometimes purely factual (but disliked/"too real") comments get like -200 upvotes, with no chance of redemption, even if it's pretty obvious everything is factual and adds to the topic.

Sometimes that happens on HN as well, but I've noticed that eventually it'll turn around. So saying something "true + unpopular + knee-jerk-inducing" can trigger a flood of 5-10 downvotes, but it eventually turns around as people seem to upvote heavily downvoted comments more, I guess.

slifin 5 days ago | parent [-]

With LLMs we are starting to get the technology where comments could be programmatically rated by more interesting scales than upvotes

5 days ago | parent [-]
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p_ing 6 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Say something minimally negative about macOS in /r/macos. You'll be -1 in no time.

I'd like to see someone post the link of retail macOS 15 is not UNIX, only a bastardized version of macOS 15 configured in-house at Apple passed UNIX 03 cert.

Thread would probably die on the vine given the number of users in that subreddit who reference "it's UNIX"!

Reddit has entirely turned into a downvote == disagree/opinion I don't like.

l72 5 days ago | parent [-]

I always thought slashdot had an interesting concept with meta moderators. Their job was to look at how someone moderated a comment and verify if it was moderated correctly. If it was that moderator was giving more moderation points (how many times they could up/down vote something). If it wasn’t they lost points.

You would be randomly asked to meta moderate random moderations.