Ask HN: How would you sort HN users by quality of comments?
Suppose you wanted to generate a list of HN users who consistently provide high-quality comments.
What metrics would you use to construct your formula?
What metrics would you use to construct your formula?
27 comments
[ 4.0 ms ] story [ 81.5 ms ] threadYou could tweak this to say that downvotes get heavier weight, say.
You could also look at number of replies, but a flamebait comment could also get a large number of replies, so that might not be a good metric.
You could also look at the number of times their posts have been flagged.
None of these are foolproof. You're probably going to have to experiment to find something that you think gives sane results.
I admit that I'd like to see your results...
Squawk = number of words in your hacker news comments
Talk = number of words in children of your hacker news comments
Comment scores for all comments added together (with negative scores taken off) / number of comments. A bit simplistic, and prone to echo chamber effects (high rated may just mean they say things they know everyone will agree with), but it's probably the most objective setup here, given the lack of miraculous super smart AI to 'judge' quality on any deeper level.
Sum the total number of upvotes and score based on that. Track an independent score for downvotes. Display the two scores separately, in addition to the ratio between them. The MVP could be as simple as `votes_for_user_in_post/votes_in_post`. Scores would be intentionally low, you're looking for a track-record of greatness and not a once-off jackpot (or crackpot) opinion.
There could be further improvements with population distributions: if most of the comments are receiving between 2 and 10 upvotes, a comment with 20 is truly exceptional (for that post).
The problem that follows is that early comments that are mediocre will likely get more upvotes than late comments that are great. You're strangely aiming for the inverse of the HN comment ranking algorithm. StackOverflow has this problem: quick answers that are barely good enough typically receive more upvotes, and S/O hasn't solved that problem.
It's easier to just filter based on popular opinions or popular people, which is what karma is for.
HN users do have their biases (in my opinion):
- Anti big company (GOOG, APPL, ... Lees so for APPL thouhg)
- Mostly left leaning
- Value political correctness over accuracy
- Anti defense and government (loathe 3 letter agencies, despite being fully cognizant of their mission statements)
I personally do not consider any comment falling squarely in the above silos to be high-quality, but you'll see them being consistently up-voted by the community.
Are you by chance right-wing? I'm solidly left wing and personally more often see the opposite bias permeate HN comments for the various topics you listed.
Example: https://hn.algolia.com/api/v1/search?query=bar&tags=comment
A high-voted comment isn't necessarily high-quality, just really popular. I recently had a command get to 36 points [0]. I'm honestly not convinced of it's quality, even though it's my own comment. It was as a strongly worded opinion based on a high level of cynicism, not research. But people liked it, so it got a decent number of votes.
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19060284