Pleading with YC: Enough with the political & financial news. More Hacker News please.
Last week was a black swan, and hence everyone wanted to know what was going on with the economy and Wall St., understandable.
Can we now get back to our regular programming and cease from submitting financial & political news? Thanks very much!
The fine folks at reddit, have 3 great sub-reddits if you are interested in reading more about:
Economics: http://www.reddit.com/r/Economics/
Business: http://www.reddit.com/r/business/
Politics: http://www.reddit.com/r/politics/
Thank you.
113 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 198 ms ] threadLast week I was actually tempted to remove it from my RSS reader due to the flood of political and other news stories totally unrelated to startups/programming/hacking/etc.
We don't need another reddit/digg/...
You can't flag it. This is stuff that hackers are interested in as you can tell by simply looking at the number of comments and votes. The site is supposed to self-regulate, but no amount of pointing out that the system is flawed seems to make a difference. Instead, you'll get dinged for complaining.
Love the crowd. Love startups and hacking. Think the up-down voting paradigm in long-dead and not crazy about continuously getting into political discussions with people I'd rather be learning from.
I like to think Hacker News is just what it says, News for Hackers. We have this pseudo-democratic up/down voting systme for a reason. If people don't want things 'off-topic' getting in, then why not just go register a tumblr account and post things you think are 'relevant'.
If you want better content, submit it yourself and upmod it on the new page.
Though I do not like to read complaints that much, either.
Please don't submit comments complaining that a submission is inappropriate for the site. http://ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
Please don't submit comments complaining that a submission is inappropriate for the site.
(1). I suggest that the "intention of the guideline" is to reduce cluttering the site with meta-discussion, and it would serve this purpose best if comment was construed as including a submission.
(2). in terms of the "letter of the guideline", what is the meaning of the words comments and submissions? The guidelines have separate sections for each, and clearly use the terminology used else on the site, which talks of comments on articles and articles that are submitted. A broader construction of "comments" as "things that comment on other things" is not the literal meaning.
Therefore, I agree that the excerpt about comments does not include submissions, and I was wrong. However, I think it should include submissions. :-) Another argument is that submissions about the site are not "On-topic", by this definition:
On-Topic: Anything that good hackers would find interesting. That includes more than hacking and startups. If you had to reduce it to a sentence, the answer might be: anything that gratifies one's intellectual curiosity.
I'm not sure that complaining about the site, and attempting to modify other people's behaviour, gratifies one's intellectual curiosity (in contrast, a discussion about how a social site can be run does do this).
However, I think in future, I might leave all such discussions to my betters, and focus on things that I find interesting, instead of trying to "improve" the site.
I feel I've been caught out on my speelling while commenting on someone else's. Shame on me!
"However, I think it should include submissions. :-)"
I agree completely.
Please don't submit comments complaining that a submission is inappropriate for the site. If you think something is spam or egregiously offtopic, you can flag it by going to its page and clicking on the "flag" link. (Not all users will see this; there is a karma threshold.)
http://ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
Isn't that exactly what you're doing too, though?
Surely you could just do what you/others have told the OP to do, and flag the 'submission'?
I do that pretty much everyday.
I mean, sure they are off-topic, but people are obviously reading them and liking it. Perhaps it's not so much the 'areas of topic' but the people, that is liked?
After all, this is a vastly different community to reddit.
Political articles are like junk food. Tempting while they're right in front of you. A little bit of indulgence is OK. Not good as a steady diet.
PG has said that he thinks he can prevent deterioration of content on HN. I think this problem is actually very difficult. It will be interesting to see what happens over the next few months.
Perhaps an accepted convention of downmodding any discussion of the political aspects of the economic stories is in order? IMHO the economic discussions are pretty relevant to us (esp. things like the capital markets for our VC-loving industry), but this isn't an economics or political site, so the links back to public policy don't really fit here.
So how long before we can can the incessant worry? Another 600 days, perhaps?
PG has said he monitors for drift and hasn't seen it. I presume that if he did he would change the guidelines accordingly.
There may be a shift, but if those numbers are accurate (and I think they're conservative) we're seeing an over reaction to a very minor issue.
I have been on hacker news a long time and still don't see a shift or pattern to indicating a decrease quality in news. I think people might be over exaggerating just a little.
Its been said before, if you want to see better content, find it, post it and vote it up.
I have been on hacker news a long time and still don't see a shift or pattern to indicating a decrease quality in news. I think people might be over exaggerating just a little.
Its been said before, if you want to see better content, find it, post it and vote it up.
I have been on hacker news a long time and still don't see a shift or pattern to indicating a decrease quality in news. I think people might be over exaggerating just a little.
Its been said before, if you want to see better content, find it, post it and vote it up.
I have been on hacker news a long time and still don't see a shift or pattern to indicating a decrease quality in news. I think people might be over exaggerating just a little.
Its been said before, if you want to see better content, find it, post it and vote it up.
My advice: Your post is getting comments about how Hacker News is adaptive and how you should just do your best to influence that. So, either weather the storm and wait for the community to create sub-communities, or move on and find something else. It's nigh impossible to force people to adhere to the behavior of the "hardcore" group.
You see the subtle difference? One dedicated bad apple can submit a lot of political news, but it will go nowhere if the average opinion of the CROWD is that political news should not be voted up.
Basically, I think Giles Bowkett is right: http://gilesbowkett.blogspot.com/2008/05/summon-monsters-ope... -- I'd incorporate his ideas into a smarter site, if I wanted to waste my life on running it.
Since this is an entrepreneurial community, this information is significantly more relevant than the 20,000th person asking what to do to start learning LISP.
For example: individuals from the Austrian and Neo-Classical schools will necessarily have a different understanding of the current financial crisis. As such, they'll have to reconcile their underlying theories in order to coherently debate the implications of those theories.
It's rather unfortunate, I think we could largely limit such discussions to just the points relevant to 'hackers,' but I don't think that we could avoid such degeneration altogether.
All this political crap is putting me off...
I don't think business is off topic seeing as this site is half about starting a business
Economics effect those businesses so in a particularly bad week esp. one in which events that haven't happened to the great depression transpire you are going to see some stories about it.
What political news are you talking about? The only posts even remotely politically related was the Palin e-mail story and that was about a vulnerability in Yahoo's password recovery system. Something people writing their own might want to keep in mind. If it had been a sports star who's e-mail had been compromised would that be a "Sports story"
1) You can read about that stuff everywhere right now (news.google, front of popular magazines).
2) It doesn't really help start my business as it provides little actionable advice.
3) Look at 1) again. I'm not interested in reading about current events on HN. Other sites do a better job of this, and that is not why I come here. Generally, if it appears on the front page of news.google.com, it shouldn't be on this site.
Of course I'm not against biz articles categorically, just the ones that meet the above criteria.
It doesn't really help start my business as it provides little actionable advice. => Very insightful.
...Except for this one complaining about them.
Off-Topic: Most stories about politics, or crime, or sports, unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon. Videos of pratfalls or disasters, or cute animal pictures. If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic.
Please don't submit comments complaining that a submission is inappropriate for the site. If you think something is spam or egregiously offtopic, you can flag it by going to its page and clicking on the "flag" link.
http://ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
Seems to me there's room for the posts you're complaining about, but no room for this post complaining about those submissions. If you don't like them your charge is clear: Use the the 'flag' feature.
Well said, worthy of an upmod for that one line ;-)
Unless you're not using the definition of "off-topic" in the guidelines?
Off-Topic: Most stories about politics, or crime, or sports, unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon. Videos of pratfalls or disasters, or cute animal pictures. If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic.
I rarely see posts that meet that criteria.
Instead of complaining, why not do a study? Classify all front page submissions for one week. I bet not 1% would touch on politics. For this time of the election cycle, that would be a great indicator of the strength of this community.
I disagree wholeheartedly on economics and business submissions, though.
p.s. <ASBESTOS>The only thing more lame than a meta-post complaining about posts are the meta-comments complaining that meta-posts are lame. GET A LIFE, PEOPLE!!!</ASBESTOS>
Anyone posting on said topics and ignoring the rule will get their karma points reset to 1.
The site has thousands of page views every single day, but the top stories routinely get less than 100 votes. The moral of the story: submit good articles and vote up on them. The ratio of voters to lurkers is probably from 1:100 to 1:300. Your votes count. The only way to avoid having an Eternal September is to participate and keep it from happening.
I agree with you, Prakash, I was really surprised to see a "pics" link make it to the front page. I thought about flagging it, but I don't know if that is appropriate or not.
I will change my upvoting habits. I believe the system can indeed work. I will upvote a little bit more often on articles that are very pertinent to this group.
It seems HN users like US politics, thats fine. But as a guess I'm sure most like p0rn too, it doesn't mean HN should be full of it...
(OK thats a pretty bad example, but you get what I mean...)
Business and economics, I'd argue belong front and center.
I figured this out about 4 cycles ago. The entire system is rigged to suck you in and be convinced that the future of mankind and the universe is at stake.
Now I try my best to ignore news outlets, especially cable news outlets, during this time of P'on Far. But every time they still suck me in anyway. This time around I was doing some bug fixes and left the convention coverage on. Pretty soon there I was, glued to the set.
Politics is much better (or worse) than sports. The games go on for months, everybody gets involved by the end, both sides try to make the stakes out to be something incredibly huge, millions (or billions) are spent trying to find you everywhere from the subway to the toilet and convince you the other guy abuses old people. Better still? The last few games have been really, really close.
I love it. But it's not HN. :)
http://news.mandalorian.com
Another slinkset I've come across that might be useful is http://www.justhackit.com
Maybe we need dedicated sites for politics and economics.
I like the principle of Hacker News, but think that with the ties to ycombinator there is an entrepeneurial element that whilst related doesn't strictly go with the hacker element in all cases.
Thankfully unlike Reddit this place hasn't turned into 4chan, complete with old memes.
Can we please have the real hn back? I miss it so much.
(Please, let's talk more about programming, less about everything else.)
1) Political articles creep in
2) Political articles draw more of the politics crowd
3) Voting power of hacker crowd decreases as a percentage of total votes
4) Submit power of hacker crowd decreases as a percentage of total submits
5) This leads to a slow but steady increase in political articles
6) Go back to 1)
This is not a self-correcting system. It can and will happily veer into irrelevance because there are far more politics/reddit type users out there on the internet than there are hackers on HackerNews.
Hence why we need to apply conscious control to it, not just "submit and vote more".
It is madness to expect the same action in the same circumstances to bring anything other than the same result.
Remember that "hacker" can mean a variety of things. For YCombinator, a "hacker" is a smart person who likes to build great things, usually using the medium of software. For other communities, "hacker" might mean script kiddie, or World of Warcraft gamer, or tech fanboy. So even the current standard - on-topic = interesting to hackers - won't necessarily protect HN.
Still, the point remains, the solution isn't fleeing to somewhere else (where the problem will likely repeat). It's sticking around and submitting posts to make the community stronger (by your standards).
Technologically, I think the solution is weighting votes by karma. That would give the initial users more say AND make it harder for new users to push the community around. But that's not our decision here.
It is self evident.
Is that enough actual real world evidence? I can keep listing social sites, that this has happened to, all day long.
Testing the predicted feedback loop, especially for #1 and #2, would seem to required actual evidence of #1 and #2 happening here.
My hypothesis is: As this place continue to gain in popularity it will continue to become more generic and reddit like.
I hope to be proven wrong.
But almost 600 days and with a major election upcoming there have been very few mentions of it. Celebrate the positives!
When I first joined Hacker News (near the beginning), a political article on the front page was an anomaly; in fact, I can't remember a good example of one. Sure, there were a few things in regards to the importance of Net Neutrality and how it could potentially affect the landscape of the Internet. There were a few about AT&T sharing records with the government, or Google not doing it. These are issues that have direct relevance to startups and "hackers", and there were hardly ever political debates or democrat/republican leanings expressed in the comments. Even then, I remember seeing perhaps one such submission on the front page per month.
Lately, it is strange not to see a few front page political articles per week. Not only that, but these articles are less relevant to our startups and to the lives of non-Americans. And to take the cake, their comments inevitably include at least one political debate thread, a few snarky comments, and a general lack of substance.
Many of the members who are here for hacker-related submissions simply stay away from such topics, and that is apparent from the difference in comment quality. It seems to me that there is a slow shift towards a Hacker News divide: "good" Hacker News submissions where the discussion is interesting and intellectually stimulating, and "bad" Hacker News submissions where the discussion tends more towards the things we're trying to avoid.
In a site called "Hacker News", this divide is unwelcome and senseless. That this submission has over 200 upvotes (not including one by me, by the way) is evidence of that. I would much rather see 3 submissions like this that indicate that the community is fighting back against irrelevance than to see even one submission that is dominated by political debates that could easily happen elsewhere.
People have been talking politics for centuries, and the likelihood that someone here is going to bring up a novel, interesting point is minuscule. In a community that is dominated by programmers, entrepreneurs, and other tech people, I'd much rather see discussion that might actually introduce me to brand new ideas and change my life for the better.
You're right. I'll try to contribute more. (After a few hundred more LOC.)
Feels good just talking about it.
is this MySpace?
understand the sentiments, but this is a tad bit ridiculous. everybody talking about doing instead of doing, and getting super excited when someone suggests more talking...
Disclaimer: I commented on this last night in another thread in my defense for being called a sock puppet for voicing my opinion like the parent. But this comment is very relevant here.
As for my complaints on your comments, it's very strange for me to read complaints from someone who has done nothing (quite literally) to fix the problem they're complaining about. You have that power just as much as I do. Why not make use of it?
Don't worry it will work itself out. Otherwise just band together with fellow HN users and just upmod the news that your interested in reading. :)