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| ▲ | m_fayer 3 days ago | parent [-] | | HN is low on ad hominem attacks, excessive straw man arguments, there is a good amount of polite disagreement, and people are often amenable to being wrong. Sure there are communal pathologies here, like excessive hair splitting (guilty), but on balance we’ve got a good thing going here. If this seems no different from the big commercial platforms to you, I frankly don’t know what to say, to me the difference is plain to see. | | |
| ▲ | diggan 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | | > to me the difference is plain to see. Agreed. HN isn't 100/0 signal/noise or even 100/0 politeness/rudeness, but I get the feeling most people discuss things with a relatively open mind here, and it's not uncommon for people to either be corrected by others and accepting it, or correcting themselves if they've found something out after submitting their comment. Just seeing that happening makes me hopeful overall. It's a huge contrast from basically any mainstream social media, where the only time you'd see something like that is when you're talking with literal friends. | |
| ▲ | closewith 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | | > HN is low on ad hominem attacks, excessive straw man arguments, there is a good amount of polite disagreement, and people are often amenable to being wrong. That's is due to active moderation, but it's orthogonal to being in a bubble. There are also some very similarly moderated, polite communities on other platforms, even Facebook, but they're still bubbles. People on HN are already self-selecting to an extent, and if you stray to far from the core audience, you'll be downvoted to dead. That's how the forum is designed to work, but it is definitionally a bubble. > If this seems no different from the big commercial platforms to you, I frankly don’t know what to say, to me the difference is plain to see. It is no different to the other well-moderated communities on the other commercial platforms. The only difference is that you like this bubble more than the others. | | |
| ▲ | awesome_dude 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | | > That's is due to active moderation, Just, FTR, there's always been the problem of how much moderation is required to keep the discourse (in a group) flowing without being so restrictive as to only be about the moderators. See IRC, which (IMO) can be over-moderated, channel ops used to be very much about themselves, vs Usenet, which had no moderation at all (and was "destroyed" by google groups making access trivial for troublemakers), through to current things like Reddit which have some moderators. It's (IMO) exactly like governance IRL - some countries overdo it, and some underdo it. | |
| ▲ | esafak 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | | Please describe what it would be like if it were not a bubble. If everything is a bubble, the concept is worthless. | | |
| ▲ | closewith 3 days ago | parent [-] | | Old-school fora and mailing lists could avoid being bubbles when moderation allowed dissenting views to surface instead of burying them. Of course, biased moderation could still create bubbles by pruning dissent. Social platforms built on voting, like HN, will almost always drift into bubbles of like-minded posts and comments. The only variation is in which views get upranked. That isn’t necessarily bad. YC clearly prefers HN to filter for a certain entrepreneurial mindset. Bubbles can serve a purpose, but it’s worth recognising that this is a manipulated environment - in many ways hollow - and not a reflection of the broader world. |
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