Thanks! Also surprising that archive.org only caught the post-pg era. I was curious how the guidelines evolved afterwards. There have been a few great additions.
I wish HN had some kind of labels. I want to filter out web development related posts. I am just bored with the usual "one line of css", "visual code", "icons for web" etc.
I'd subscribe to just tech, personal projects, psychology and history if I could.
Filter for posts like those, or filter out posts like those? I don't see the ability filter out those in my account settings, although I could be missing something.
No one said that HN is turning into Reddit, just that the described feature sounds like subreddits. If anything, your eagerness to defend HN against any sort of comparison to Reddit feels like satire.
I believe that feature omission is intentional. There have been dozens of articles - interesting, thought-provoking articles - that were outside my typical interests, but ended up being well worth the read.
I actually kind of like it this way... I already follow some more specialized industry literature like Smashing Magazine or MDN Hacks. I don’t use HN the same way as those. Then when a front-end related news reaches the HN front page it is a cause for celebration.
Surely, if HN had a /web-dev I would stop using it as HN and use it more like I already use the specialized blog pages I already follow.
> I wish HN had some kind of labels. I want to filter out [...]
I was thinking something similar recently. I’m uninterested in well over half of the posts that appear on the front page, usually because they involve technical topics I don’t care about. Most HN readers must be similar, each with different needs and tastes.
Then I thought that the perfect solution would be an algorithm that would highlight posts and comments similar to those I’ve liked in the past and hide those I don’t like. Soon I would be seeing only what I want to see, and I wouldn’t be bothered by anything else.
Then a shiver went down my spine, and I decided that HN is best as it is.
In addition to avoiding the awfulness that is “The Algorithm”, the lack of filtering/recommendations and infinite scroll means that there are generally only 0-5 items interesting enough for me to waste time on. I find that HN is far more interesting than other sites, but because of that limitation, it’s a far less problematic source for procrastination.
Infinite scroll, IMHO, is an abysmal anti-pattern. 99% of the implementations don't work well with the back button. I think I can count the number of times on one hand that I was glad to have infinite scroll instead of pagination, and I don't think I've ever said to myself "gee, I wish I didn't have to click 'next' to see more things"
Absolutely. I often wonder if I’m just part of a tiny minority who still uses the back button, given how many large sites disregard it at best and break it at worst.
I still enjoy those posts. When they get enough traction I usually take notice as something I should store in the memory vault, even if it is of no interest to me or my career. I even find myself appending 'hackernews' to google searches when I am really trying to discover more about a tech I am not well versed in, but want to get started on the best path.
Sounds like you want subreddits, I don’t. Right now HN is one community and everyone sees the same front page, if you add subreddits the community will fragment and we’ll get a lot less insight.
One alternative mechanism used on a site is to allow for filtering _out_ of tags. You still discover stuff but you can totally opt out of anything tagged “rant”. Imagine if you never had to read another substack post about cancel culture ending everything on your tech forum…
I'd rather have more CSS posts personally, because they are in a way still tech related, than seeing the site turn into a generic news aggregator, or as I've said other times, a slightly more techy version of Ars Technica.
The guideline that "we should post things hackers [users] would find interesting" was good a decade ago, now we've good a ton of people that post their favourite long form articles and Twitter posts. I don't care for history, commentaries on society or personal philosophy musings with my code.
Honestly, I'm not really complaining, at least the quality of the discussion is still higher than elsewhere on the Internet.
>The guideline that "we should post things hackers [users] would find interesting" was good a decade ago, now we've good a ton of people that post their favourite long form articles and Twitter posts. I don't care for history, commentaries on society or personal philosophy musings with my code.
Do you believe the only thing hackers should find interesting is "code?"
No, but that kind of leeway is what kills sites during an Eternal September. And no one ask for proof you're an hacker to open an account here (thankfully I might add). Hacker in the guidelines is just a synonym for user.
Again, I don't want to force HN to limits its discussion to tech _only_, I'm just saying that I think it's getting more and more diluted.
Personally, I would like to see any political flag-waving and finger-pointing like yours banned with extreme prejudice. It certainly doesn't make for interesting discussion.
I just said I'm not a fan of _any_ politics on a tech forum. I do not spread my political beliefs on HN.
Talking politics is, together with discussing your favourite football team or religion, the lowest form of intellectualism: if you agree, it's an echo chamber, if you don't, we're just talking past each other.
Yeah, the ideal HN post should be fascinating for hackers and deathly boring for everyone else. Ragebait draws masses who could easily swamp the signal:noise of any thread here.
No, but I am with the person you are replying to that if a higher percentage of the content had to do with hacking it would make HN a more interesting place.
You can do this with a time bound (day, week, month, year). Searches within the past 24 hours should turn up active discussions.
The hack I use is to search comments rather than posts, as the latter afford a larger search surface. You risk turning up some digression thread on a topic, but that's an occupational hazard...
Otherwise:
- Click on the "past" titlebar link to see top-ranked posts from the previous day. You can navigate by day/week/month/year through all of HN history.
- Click on the "past" post link to find earlier discussions of a particular story / link, if any.
- Click on the submitted link domain URL to find other items from that particular site.
- See what specific users are submitting. I occasionally find interesting content navigating HN by user rather than by submissions.
- Look to see what's getting submitted on the "New" queue. Voting or flagging early can influence what shows up on HN for discussion.
- Submit your own material. Odds are low, I'm lucky to have one in ten items see any activity. It's a numbers game. Submissions which relate to other recent submissions (but aren't merely fad-chasing) seem to do reasonably well. I turn up numerous older references through other research, some of which seems to do well on HN.
This might be as good a thread as any to ask this: What's going on with the 1000+ comment threads on articles lately? It used to be pretty rare but I'm noticing it more often. Most recently with the Elon Musk Twitter purchase thread and today with a relatively benign article about Netflix:
Hacker News is really not setup for such long threads -- you basically get one top-level comment for the entire page! That's not very engaging. It's just a feeling but it seems some topics are getting an order of magnitude more comments than usual.
Possible I’m missing something obvious, but how do you see someone’s user ID? If I click on my or someone else’s profile, I just get a link with id=<username>.
Even though HN recently added the prev/next buttons, I find it much more convenient being able to click on the indentation bar in Reddit to collapse the comment that the bar drops from.
Specifically, I often decide partway down a thread that I've read enough of it and want to move to the next one—on HN, this entails scrolling up to the parent comment of that thread to click its [-] or next button, disrupting the flow of reading. The root/parent buttons are supposed to do this for you, but they're only useful if the thread in question is top-level or only one comment deep, which is decreasingly the case with increasingly popular posts.
The click-to-collapse in Reddit is sadly only implemented by some subreddit themes (and in the redesign), but in the default theme the visible bar is still useful for clarifying the level of indentation of a comment following a deeper thread that puts its parent out of view.
Also, is there an accepted name for this sort of 'indentation line'? New Reddit gives them the 'threadline' class, a name I don't see anywhere else. There's something similar in IDEs for collapsing indented code blocks, and the vertical lines in Win32-like tree views seem related, but I can't find any names for those, either. Searching only reveals a few post-redesign Reddit threads complaining about the click-to-collapse being unintuitive. But considering all the 'HN secrets' threads we have here, that seems to make it a perfect fit.
I really like the press-and-hold to collapse children interaction in the mobile Reddit app, along with the button in the bottom right to jump to the next top level comment.
It’s not directly monetized so the design is meant to serve the user. In contrast social media design principles are about controlling user behavior to maximize revenue. This means HN is fast, simple, and information dense. Those are desirable properties on any device.
Those links are great, I just wish there was a way to get back after clicking parent.
In long threads, it's easy to loose track of which parent a given comment is replying to. So I'll click `parent`, which gives me the context I need. But then I have no way to get back to the reply I was reading previously.
The lack of a redesign I think is a big part why the community remains (if it ain't broken, don't fix it!), plus HN's heavy moderation -- towards these very guidelines.
For sure it’s very carefully moderated, dang works very hard to keep conversations civil and away from flaming, especially around politics. “Heavy” has some negative connotations though. I think the moderation is appropriate.
Dang tends to be fair in his assessments. The first and last time he called me out he made it clear that I ran afoul of the terms and that I should go read them again if I had not. I stopped posting and went and read them. Like another poster said above this is a place where people get chances and when those are given even multiple times to the same person before getting "heavy" there is a high likelihood that people can turn around for the better and permanently. This is now the only place I come due to it being laid out by dang in the way that he did and my active decision to take the advice and become a better poster. There are a lot of very intelligent people here and sometimes I am in awe with the breadth of knowledge that is shared in the comments. I agree that the moderation has been appropriate and effective at that. Things are changing for the positive in my life all around thanks to that reminder and my choice to be a better person because of it.
Because probably dang and company tries to nip the bud when the link is posted. Since that most that pass that filter are relatively uncontroversial (they're things that interests some and silently ignored by others), they only need to actively monitor those with inherently high-level controversy (like partisan politics).
The moderation is quiet but very firm. For example, I can't post more than like 8 comments per day without getting blocked by rate-limit errors because dang has decided I get in too many flamewars.
I think it is like 5 comments in the same hour and then you have to observe for the next 3 hours (or something like that, I don’t know exactly).
I love this feature. I’m of a personality which really easily gets baited into flamewars (which is against the guidelines). Being forced to stop after 5 posts forces me into a cooldown period where I can reflect on my behavior. When the shutdown is over I will probably be demotivated enough to continue this recklessness and the probability of me being yelled at by dang goes down with it.
If I have something important to say, it can wait a couple of hours.
Between actual moderation and community moderation, yes. The way moderation works on HN is somewhat hidden though: dead comments will disappear, post titles and such are edited with no (publicly visible anyway) history, etc.
Inspired by Stalin, I imagine. I'm nervous to say 'it works', since we don't know really know what's being suppressed or changed.
HN is more heavily moderated than all the sites people complain about on here. If you browse the front page you’ll frequently find titles which make no sense at all because they’re stripped of the adjective which meant anything.
If you browse any of it chronologically with showdead you'll find tons of completely innocent stuff moderated out from ever showing up before it would’ve ever been visible, quite often on first post for no apparent reason.
Unlike other communities where excess moderation is a concern (a frequent discussion here), you can’t object to a decision publicly. I’m knowingly flouting the abstract version of that fact because I think it objectively contributes to the discussion. But I have every reason to believe even this is going too far.
The main issue I notice is that the up/down arrows and other UI elements are too tiny to easily/accurately tap with a touchscreen. Thankfully touchscreens are pretty good at guessing which HTML element my fat fingers are touching, but it still leaves me a bit paranoid about e.g. whether I upvoted or downvoted.
In tiny, gray text, with words that look similar to those with imperfect eyesight. It could easily be improved without breaking the site's entire aesthetic, IMO.
I am acutely nearsighted so I can still read 2mm tall characters unaided and am well past the point when most humans require corrective lenses for reading.
It's sort of a super power right about now.
So it depends. I dislike large text on my phone. old.reddit.com works just fine for me as well.
> If you are looking for an app, I am the developer of HACK
A little off-topic, but I'm totally blind (use VoiceOver) and just tried the app on iOS. A few issues:
* Several buttons are unlabelled, so I'm not sure what they do.
* Navigating through posts isn't the most efficient (I need to swipe several times to move from post to post).
* The relative level of comments within a thread isn't announced (i.e. replies to OP are at level 1, replies to those replies are level 2, etc). Are these indented visually?
* Accessibility actions should be added to quickly vote, reply to comments, etc.
Happy to provide additional feedback/model apps that do this well, but I'm not an iOS developer.
Thanks for the feedback. It’s my fault and I apologize because I hadn’t taken accessibility into account while development. I will look into making the app accessible in updates.
Various well-manicured gardens tucked away in Reddit are quite nice. And honestly I don't think HN is as nice as it used to be now that more and more culture war topics are creeping in.
I hear people say this all the time but even the “well-manicured” gardens like the neutral news subreddits suffer from the fact that Reddit as a platform is just not a proper solution for actual discussion. HN is a bit better even and only due to not showing comments karma.
It is rare (in fact I’ve never witnessed this) that I see someone on Hacker News spout paragraphs of completely inaccurate information and be rewarded with hitting the top of the page. The culture on Reddit is so bad that on more than one occasion I’ve had someone respond to me with nonsense and provide sources that don’t even mention the topic at hand. But because people see links they upvote (and once a post has a positive upvote rating inertia kicks in since people want to agree with the karma score.)
So I disagree, you can manicure rotten eggs all day and they’ll still be rotten. Reddit is rotten and it gets worse every sprint as they introduce more and more Facebook features. The problems with Reddit have only been magnified by the fact that a majority of its users today use it as an app similar to tik tok, and the company is encouraging this. Mainly because what the platform was initially designed as (a top site + forum for the whole internet) isn’t as profitable as being just another gamified and over advertised platform where people can argue about whatever the topic of the day is.
If every reddit user had a tag displaying their age, it would help shed light on why that site is such a joke. I suspect it's largely teenagers and young 20-somethings playing expert in a wide variety of fields.
It definitely is, the demographic seems to completely have changed from when I began using Reddit a decade ago. It use to be fairly technical in nature similar to HN. That has completely changed as even the commentary is so poor compared to just a couple years ago that I can’t believe a company would be so hostile to the user base that initially built it in favor of becoming an application the market has little need for.
There’s plenty of social media companies out there already I don’t see why Reddit decided to become a worse version of Facebook when it could have charted a different path. I’m bitter I guess, as every other social media company is realizing they need to take a step back and add ways to make discussion more civil Reddit is doing the opposite and their karma system actively helps bad faith actors due to how much it affects the perception if a given post.
I’m completely done with Reddit, the last two times I’ve reinstalled it the UI has added improvements that I don’t want and I haven’t a productive conversation there in over a year.
I've definitely seen this happen in a slightly different form on hacker news. For example, sometimes someone will reply to a dissenting post simply with a link to the original posters profile as if their history and karma somehow justifies not arguing with them.
I'm genuinely not sure what value the karma system adds
Culture wars topics have always existed on HN. Today it is landlord/motherboard, a few years ago it was master/main, and who can forget Donglegate?
Actually HN used to be libertarian as hell with a significant Rand contingent inherited from the Startup community. I feel that HN has mellowed politically over the years as a greater international audience has joined.
That is nice. I’m worried I somehow damaged my phones wifi radio (it sits infinitely looking for SSIDs while never finding any now) and my mobile network is screwy, constantly switching networks between low-bar LTE and 5G. Sometimes HN is the only site that wants to load
I feel like places like tigsource have better civility and high signal to noise ratios.
There are a lot of forums that are good cuz they just ban annoying people (and that self selects a lot too). When you try to do mental gymnastics to justify removing people from a community suddenly a certain kind of person can show up and ruin it for everyone. (EDIT: that can be a valid choice for a community! Just has consequences)
But HN feels pretty unique in the quality despite being filled with a looooot of people who are, honestly, pretty agressive! The mod team seems to do a pretty good job.
A lot of my early experiences on the web involved being banned from places (forums) until I learned to be civil or at least contribute something interesting.
The bans weren’t designed to be an excommunication but an inconvenience. I’d sign up again with another username which they knew was me, and I could stay until I acted like an idiot again and they banned me, etc.
Yeah, people complain about censorship and bans on social media now, but honestly I don't see it. Seems like you can pretty much spit out nothing but hatred and personal attacks on Twitter or Reddit for years and nothing will happen.
The problem at least for Reddit is consistency and quality of moderation. Moderators will play favorites, and they'll spitefully punish people they don't like. There's no rules on Reddit - paid moderation is the fundamental difference with HN.
Twitter completely banned The Babylon Bee for this [1] article/joke. This is among countless other similar decisions on their part. In this case Elon Musk even contacted them (The Babylon Bee) before starting his current crusade, because the ban there is so overtly political.
As Noam Chomsky said, "The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum."
The reason I give that quote is because you're not wrong. In other topics you can express all of the absolutely vile and hateful things one might like, all while acting like an absolutely horrible person. So just stop making fun of the political ideology largely espoused by the political establishment and corporate elite, and you'll have no problems. It will be quite interesting to see how history ultimately records the times of today.
Yes, this is a good thing. I don’t like real name policies or accounts tied to a phone number or LinkedIn account for this reason. We all benefit when the young or inexperienced get multiple chances to figure things out.
It depends how you define "communities". If you treat each of Reddit's subreddits as a separate community then there are a lot of small-to-medium sized ones that qualify.
I feel that people who find HN good, do so for a reason.
They are the kind of people who are in majority in HN. They have similar views and when they comment here on HN their views are accepted and prompted more readily.
This makes it a kind of an echo chamber.
All deviants get banned or their comments are greyed out.
Dissenting is not allowed and dealt with severity and finality.
That’s fine though. It’s ok to have communities with shared interests and goals. Sometimes that means keeping out people who prefer something different. That’s ok too; they can start a forum for their community and impose whatever conditions they like. HN is just an Internet forum. It’s not a massive social media platform or a country where exclusionary rules can be damaging to large populations.
Their official new car reviews [2] page is thorough. There are owner-reviews of most cars as well [3] (like for instance there's a dozen owner reviews for the BMW X3).
There's no membership fee. You don't need to be a member to read the content; you have to be a member to post content though.
It does not do advertisements of cars themselves (and openly calls out manufacturers who approach them with rewards for favorable reviews) because they believe it's difficult to be critical of manufacturers after accepting money from them for ads.
However, there are ads for non-car products so you might want to keep your ad-blockers on :D
Their moderators have other proper day-jobs. Like, they're doctors, entrepreneurs/business-people, dentists, teachers, pilots, software engineers (!) and everything else under the sun. The reason I mention this is because this website isn't really a source of income for anybody.
Content is moderated heavily, and people in violation of their guidelines [4] are banned (as long as you're civil, use proper English, don't use swear words etc you'll be fine).
This comment made me think of a local online social network that was used predominantly in Umeå, Sweden. I can't speak for what happened in DMs but all the public facing content was very civil. And hardly any noise whatsoever.
But I don't think local online communities will ever managed to get established anew again.
Apberget? It was fairly outstanding in being mostly clean and professionally ran without attempting to go national or sell out much. Until they did get bought.
Lots. And they are as unknown to you as HN is likely to be to the users of them.
I run a number of forums, the largest yielding 250k monthly visitors. It's not huge... But it's 15 years old, very civil, and more interestingly has near zero moderation.
The ones I operate I do so on a simple basis... This forum is default dead, if you as users run it into the ground I'll turn it off as I make no money from it do not have any incentive to tolerate your bs. Make of this space whatever you want, but if you want it to exist then that's something that you all need to make happen by figuring out how to be adults.
It works.
I kill 10 sites for every one that makes it, and the ones that make it are great.
This is fascinating and I'd love to hear more about it. I generally despise heavy handed moderation as it changes the feel of a community from "a bunch of people talking about X" to "a group of power-mad narcissists and their groupies". Do you see ways of seeding forums that are effective? What kind of moderation do you have (I noticed that LGSS has moderators) - is it just "remove spam and illegal stuff"? Do you have rules for the forums? How often does a long-running forum suddenly, or not so suddenly, go bad? One of my lifelong "addictions" is tabletop RPGs, but the choice of forums just kinda is poor, mostly because of moderation, and so I always have in the back of my mind starting a new one, but I'm always concerned about the moderation effort, so the concept that you can take a different "moderation-free" path is tantalizing!
>I kill 10 sites for every one that makes it, and the ones that make it are great.
That's interesting, a sort of Darwinian selection pressure towards actual discussion. Though as I type that out it occurs to me that that could be a decent working definition of "good moderation"
>Whether this is a substantial contributor is difficult to ascertain because people in the tech and filmmaking industries are unwilling to publicly acknowledge that this might actually be a problem.
Alternate take -it's not a problem and they're actually serving an audience which enjoys that content.
In the case of Netflix specifically, the problems that are driving people away are non-partisan in nature: shows being cancelled early, arbitrary price increases and clamping down on the password sharing policy.
None of those have anything to do with the culture war and everything to do with colossal mismanagement by Netflix. They'd be unchanged even if NetFlix's content was to the right of One America News.
My point is that the problem with Netflix has nothing to do with content, and everything to do with mismanagement.
I'm really sorry about your whitewashing narratives (or whatever) but you're either deliberately missing my point and/or trying to hand-wave away from it. If it's the latter, I do not appreciate that.
First off, brownwashing isn't a thing -I dismiss people who believe in zombies too. I don't have a lot of time or sympathy for people who are upset that fictional characters are no longer portrayed as being of the dominant race.
I have a hard time believing that the people who do object to the progressive content are the reason for this. They may be a contributing factor but I'm honestly skeptical that the numbers who drop it for that specific reason are signifigant.
Honestly what I have seen here and on reddit etc are more neutral complaints -about service, about series getting canceled, etc.
I didn’t read the Netflix thread but here are a few topics tangentially related to Netflix which have the potential to spark interesting debates on HN:
* Netflix’s worker and labor policy: Being a FAANG it is inevitably interesting to tech workers how one of the big profile companies treads their workers. In a healthy class aware industry this should be a hot topic and indeed an issue in the culture war (as described by Marx himself a century and a half ago). Regardless, as a tech worker my self it is always interesting to see what other tech workers think about our current state of our working conditions.
* Netflix’s role in our entertainment: We are humans after all and like different things, we also like to talk about what we like and do not like. Netflix has been particularly brutal in cancelling loved media before the authors of said media had plans to write more (e.g. GLOW, Sense8, etc.) There are some media critics among us that surely has an interesting take on this, and other cultural critics which can go on about what this means in the broader context of our cultures.
* Netflix’s influence in the shift of how media is consumed: Being an early streaming platform it has inevitably had a huge influence in individualization and the platformization of media, for better or worse. Most HN users consume media and have felt this and have an opinion on this. There are a lot of amateur—and some professional—philosophers among us which like to share their take on the philosophy of consumerism. These takes can indeed be interesting.
I mean, I took a look at the topic and I see a bunch of people kramering into it to complain about how shows like She-Ra are too gay and spreading homosexual propaganda or to complain that Netflix is too progressive or hates free speech. Ignore that Netflix stood behind Chappelle when people criticized him and his comedy specials. There were plenty of other posts that went deeper into how pricing issues and anti-consumer issues are more of a problem but when that's the solid halfish of the first page I see it doesn't spell a healthy topic.
I think sites like HN are increasingly prone to this sort of thing as the user base grows and the self-selection filter falters. That's why I distanced myself from posting on HN due to issues I felt were never going to be resolved. It's less tedious to just post somewhere smaller where it's easier to filter out bad faith people and/or maintain post quality.
Half the front page of comments is "I cancelled Netflix because they are shoving political propaganda down my throat" with vaguer and vaguer acquisitions when asked for specifics.
> And HN is one of the only places on the web or in person where you won't be banned or silenced for voicing the wrong opinions, provided you are tactful.
I LOL'd at this. There's a tremendous lack of tact here.
It's not about tact it's about tone. You can advocate incredibly cruelty if you do it with bloodless prose in a detached voice. This isn't a novel observation on here. But I have seen dang himself attack someone for pointing this out, and said they were using a slur.
That's definitely not a ban, it's not silencing either by itself. But it's a solid first step in that direction. And having moderated large groups myself I know you can effectively disallow certain positions by signaling to the rest of the community that you want them shut down.
HN's actual moderation is significantly based on this sort of "soft power" approach, where you're rarely explicitly blocked from saying something and there's no official list of verboten ideas, but you'll get this sort of distributed denouncement.
I don't know that this is actually worse than having a set list of disallowed positions or not. Different tradeoffs for sure and HN seems a lot more socially stable than most message boards over time. But on the other hand (iirc) it has a small and consistent set of mods, so it's hard to tell what's from policy and what's from their vocational aptitude.
If I expressed a preference for unmoderated online spaces, I did not intend to. I much prefer consistent and authoritative moderation of explicitly communicated rules. It's really the third part of that I think we're missing.
This is so vague that it’s impossible to meaningfully engage.
What’s a discussion that needs to be had? “Free speech” doesn’t mean freedom from people telling you you’re being juvenile, selfish or paranoid and that we’d like you to do something for the community that supports you.
I have noticed some commonalities across both liberal and conservative leaning forums. You can get dog piled for saying the wrong thing in polite words. Or using the wrong words. Or the wrong tone. Or sometimes failing to say something in a post. People react less to what you said, but what it sounds like you might be saying, treating it as though you had plainly said that thing.
It feels very "Tribalist". The way you speak about things is a shibboleth for the "team" you are on, regardless of what you write. And that is how the community reacts often, regardless of the content of your post.
I definitely think internet trolls bear some blame for it, because this is basically communities being on high alert for bad faith actors and becoming more insular as a result.
The "Google docs now starts making inclusive word replacement suggestions like motherboard=>mainboard" thread was kind of a mess, and I'm not sure dang scales.
I’m not surprised, I didn’t even read that one because of that. Although I was happy the article itself was about the failures of the implementation at its goals and not just the goals themselves.
I’ve also seen some individual comments on other threads that really just attack the author of the article in question with ad hominems and totally unnecessary insinuations. Not even political posts but things like the Python typing post from the other day.
They should choose some other infrastructure than whatever the dang system is then. Or maybe open source it and hope AWS makes a dang multi-instance auto-scaling service.
I've seen it's bot moderation posts though and I have to say it's quality work, passes the Turing test for me. Which makes it all the more surprising that no one has spun it into a real product. I'm not a 10x programmer but if they let me have a go at it I could probably throw one together in a weekend in my garage.
>Please don't complain that a submission is inappropriate. If a story is spam or off-topic, flag it. Don't feed egregious comments by replying; flag them instead. If you flag, please don't also comment that you did
I wonder if this is the most routinely violated rule.
> Please don't complain about tangential annoyances—things like article or website formats, name collisions, or back-button breakage. They're too common to be interesting.
This is the one that gets my vote. If anything is posted from Twitter it’s almost HN law that 80% of comments have to be complaining about the fact that it’s on Twitter.
Yeah, this is the one. If a page is slow loading, works poorly without JS, has a noisy layout, etc., you’re gonna hear more about that in the comments than the actual content.
Overall though, these guidelines are mostly followed surprisingly well. HN has done a great job building a strong community with a cohesive culture.
It’s a site that gathers people together to post & comment on all the newest tech while at the same time HN itself is host on some of the most basic and boring tech - a flat file based forum.
Mainframes are actually the opposite of boring relative to a standard desktop. Boring jobs? Yes, but IBM have some extremely talented people working on them.
Seasoned engineers go for simple and effective tech. You can find a good amount of those on here. A few might browse the site from lynx or Emacs.
The other "fancy" tech forum full of new tech and slow as molasses (Reddit) is mostly frequented by the younger, more inexperienced generation of hackers.
No, the only reason HN uses flat files is that the forum is a MVP for Arc Lisp, and pg just wanted to implement everything in Arc. Seasoned engineers understand the drawbacks and benefits of different forms of technology and choose the right tool for the job rather than simply assuming the simplest solution is always the best. I'm not insulting HN here but it is what it is, one person's side project that took off.
Also, Reddit is able to handle millions of users and over a million subreddits while Hacker News nearly collapses if a single thread gets too much traffic. Comparing the two and deciding Reddit was built by less experienced developers with inferior, poorly thought out technology is just ridiculous.
I get more issues with Reddit breaking that HN, and of course the first one has more users, but also brings much more revenue and has more SRE than HN has.
HN is neither simple nor inherently scalable. Dang recently asked people to log out so he could manually deal with a thread whose traffic was slowing down the entire site[0,1]. As a framework HN has fundamental architectural flaws and scalability has always been one of them. That would never happen even on a small forum with a relational database and proper load balancing/caching etc (in other words, with all that "fancy" modern stuff HN often considers unnecessary.)
Reddit is really bad though. Of all the tech companies I think they must be up there for the worst technology. Buggy on mobile, slow, user-hostile etc.
As a company I'm not sure whether that means they're doomed or whether they've built a userbase so strong they couldn't kill it if they tried.
I meant the app. On Android at least it's slow, unreliable and recently had even started to open the wrong thread when I click on things. This is not on an old phone either.
Reddit was built on Rails and used to shit itself constantly. I'm pretty sure the primary reason why it's more stable now is a lot of work, improvements in how Ruby runs, and that they throw a billion servers at it. I can't remember where I got this idea, but I think HN just runs on one or two machines.
And I am so happy that HN is as simple as it is. Makes browsing it so pleaseant in general. The only feature I am missing for large discusions: a way of tracking which part of the discussion I already have read. Revisiting a large discussion sometimes later currently means a lot of duplicate reading.
Otherwise I prefer the web format of HN a lot against all other similar forums.
The question was whether anything changed that prompted this post. I am the poster. I answered why I posted it. It didn't have anything to do with Eternal September.
The one thing in there I forgotten or overlooked is to put [pdf] on the end, I just assumed it did that automatically. I can't recall if I have ever posted a pdf but if I do in the future I will have to try to remember to do that. Although, it would be a small suggestion that it could be automated.
I wish this was still the case. Talking about politics used to be avoided here, and certainly engaging in reddit-tier partisan arguing was extremely rare. Now there are political posts almost every day that have comment sections full of mud slinging. I'm guilty of it too, even as recently as today, so I'm not taking a holier than thou position, but man those threads are just incredibly strong flamebait.
There has been a noticeable shift in the way HN engages with political topics over the last couple of years, and more recently in particular.
I agree and would be in favor of more heavy moderation on this. I strongly suspect HN will descend into a kind off reddit if this is not put a halt to. Curious to hear the views of the HN mods on this, but I expect they won't publicly engage in that discussion.
I think it's simply a reflection of the shift of how educated society engages with political topics. If it affects quality of life of humans, it is political. This has always been true, it's fundamentally the point of politics.
However, the effects on the QoL of many humans is not a concern to those of us who have the privilege to simply look away and not notice a difference to our own quality of life. This privileged demo has drastically shrunk (ie, politics directly and noticeably impacts the QoL of far more people) today, mostly because the rest of the people have deservedly been given more of a voice. Policy in its present state can mean the difference between life and death for many people who happily steered clear of "politics" 5 years ago, and talking about it is an option for people who were silenced and closeted 10 years ago.
Even those of us who wilfully try to plug their ears and come up a system of rules and restricted topics that are "political" and "to be avoided" will find it incredibly hard to enforce, because someone or other will break the rule, and it's physically impossible for everyone else to keep their peace until a moderator brings the banhammer.
The world is going through shared turmoil right now and politics is naturally a first stop to look for society-level resolutions, or at least adjustments to existing rules to improve QoL.
I agree that it's not possible to steer clear of politics. But there is more than one way to discuss politics and political aspects related to hacking and entrepreneurship (such as markets, oligopolies, net neutrality, copyrights, patents, encryption, etc)
One way is to focus on difficult questions, on the inevitable trade-offs and on interesting, perhaps less conventional solutions. These debates are supposed to make people think.
The other is to declare all questions settled and focus on rhetorical tactics to suppress the enemy. Stop thinking, start acting, crush the evil enemy, it's about life and death!
In my opinion, this latter form of politics should be kept off HN. Thinking is not a luxury that we can no longer afford once decisions become important to people's lives. It's a necessity at all times and it needs space.
"political aspects related to hacking and entrepreneurship (such as markets, oligopolies, net neutrality, copyrights, patents, encryption, etc)"
I agree that if it's related like these topics, that it has a place here. One thing that is on here often is the talk about housing density and zoning. I don't think that has a technical tie-in to entrepreneurship or hacking.
That said, I don't really mind as long as the conversation occurs with an open mind and people are bringing new ideas to the table and not just parroting the mainstream takes.
I disagree, I think it’s a reflection of lack of critical thinking skills when it comes to political topics. People are so polarized now they have lost the ability to discuss nuance, see the other side, or really compromise at all.
Everything is couched in terms of “with us or against us” extremist dichotomies much like the one hiding in the undertone of your post.
Of course everyone thinks their political views are critical to life the same way people think their religion is important. It’s still super rude to bring up religion in an orthogonal topic and it’s still super rude to do the same with politics.
"I disagree, I think it’s a reflection of lack of critical thinking skills when it comes to political topics. People are so polarized now they have lost the ability to discuss nuance, see the other side, or really compromise at all."
I think this is generally true, but I also think HN is one of the more open minded places on most of the topics. I think the main problem I have seen in political debates on here are when someone automatically assumes a scientific finding should be policy. In reality, we as a society need to figure out how to apply that finding in a way that balances multiple concerns and fits with society's other rules and values.
I disagree with you and the parent as to the core issue / cause.
Critical thinking skills generally didn't vanish over the past 5, 10, 20, 30 years. That still exists and you can see it in numerous other topics of discussion that don't get so heated. In some spheres of discourse such skills have been overridden by emotion, feelings, however. People are being taught to suppress rational thought and to unleash emotional reaction instead.
What has happened is a cultural shift in which outrage behavior, reaction-to-whatever, being triggered, feelings-as-all-important, et al. has become acceptable and primary. Virtue signaling - which is a resulting disease of this shift - is omnipresent today. That all started to build notably throughout the prior decade and accelerated during the Trump years. Emotional reaction and how strong that reaction is, became a way to win contests intellectually. This primacy of feelings is now being taught throughout the US at all levels and at all times. It's an intellectual disaster, it turns adults into infants emotionally and intellectually. It stunts their growth mentally and it makes them fragile, weak, unable to partake in rigourous debate without shattering down to emotionally acting out (if you're losing in a debate, throw a culturally potent accusation card to end the debate). For a masterclass in this behavior observe Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, when she does something stupid or ignorant, or when she is caught lying, and watch how she avoids responsibility (she acts out very emotionally and immediately begins throwing any and all accusation cards to deflect and shut down discussion); or observe her approach to argumentation generally, she always argues from feelings-as-primary (watch how she uses her hands as she speaks, it's a tip-off); she's out on the tip of the intellectual spear for the US cultural implosion and the impending rise of violent tribalism and highly dysfunctional statism in the US culturally (and it's no coincidence she's an avowed Socialist; 20 years from now if you disagree with her emotions, her brown shirts equivalent - Antifa & Co. - will burn your house down; we're nearly at that level of primative cultural behavior now).
People have gradually come to tolerate outrageous emotional behavior. It's conceptually no different than the broken window theory. Bit by bit more and more emotional, acting-out behavior has become tolerated in the culture. Now it's widespread and the US culture is increasingly a cultural ghetto. When feelings become supreme in the intellectual realm, reason and reasonable behavior loses out every time. The culture that behaves that way will collapse rapidly into tribalism and conflict, lacking the approach necessary to resolve intellectual conflict (turning to feelings and emotion as primary can only end in violent conflict in an intellectual contest, there's no way then to determine right from wrong culturally other than who can shriek the loudest or hit the hardest).
Which in a way boils down to the corrupt voting system of the US. Since the voting system makes it mathematically "impossible" for more than 2 parties to exist you end up voting for either party, and since there's only two, the other one is a piece of shit.
With another voting system (CGP Grey YouTube has great videos on this) you'll have more parties meaning you're not put against one "opponent" that you'll always hate.
Your voting system is not democratic (if you're from the US) and I see it as weird how this isn't mentioned more often.
Sadly this is not US only issue, I'm from Italy and here is the same, very polarized view, black or white, if you're not with us you are against us. I hate this.
> politics directly and noticeably impacts the QoL of far more people today
> difference between life and death for many people who happily steered clear of "politics" 5 years ago
> The world is going through shared turmoil right now
You seem to be implying that the political situation has deteriorated and become more violent. Is that so?
In 1968, several students were killed during protests against the Vietnam War. The Civil Rights movement sparked demonstrations and riots during which many people were killed (eg 34 at the Watts riots). The 1992 Los Angeles riots resulted in 63 deaths.
And that's only in the US. In China, you had TianAnMen in 1989. In Germany, you had the Rote Armee Fraktion (Baader-Meinhoff) terror until 1998 with scores of deaths. The Irish Troubles also lasted until 1998 and killed over 3000 people.
So, I'd say it is not worse now than, say, five decades ago. It could be that we have had one or two particularly peaceful decades, but I wonder how much bias there is in that assessment. How could one quantify it, or otherwise try to capture it objectively?
>2. That recent deterioration is most certainly embedded within a massive improvement over a longer horizon.
The point was that political discussion became more common on this board in the last five years due to this "deterioration." So whether things are better now than 60 years ago isn't relevant to that point.
> When disagreeing, please reply to the argument instead of calling names. "That is idiotic; 1 + 1 is 2, not 3" can be shortened to "1 + 1 is 2, not 3."
> Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith
Adding willful seems to violate these. The first, maybe a stretch, as willful applies to the author and not the argument. But more the second as it does not assume good faith. I think the comment holds the same value without adding willful.
> You seem to be implying that the political situation has deteriorated and become more violent. Is that so?
Perhaps not more violent, but there does seem to be more polarization, which is not a good path to be going down. Ezra Klein's 2020 book is an interesting look of the phenomenon in the US:
> You seem to be implying that the political situation has deteriorated and become more violent. Is that so?
No, this was not my intended implication at all.
The point was that when PoC raise their voices for BLM, refugee & immigrant rights, or when trans folk rally and protest for trans rights and against transphobic laws, or when anti-vaxxers/maskers force governments to impose mandates and reinstate lockdowns during COVID spikes, or when rural car owners demand lower gas prices forcing nations to conduct business with a war-perpetrator like Russia, it directly affects the quality of life of people who probably don't consider themselves part of these movements -- often mildly disruptive, sometimes largely disruptive, sometimes net positive.
And the implication was that with the internet in general and social media in particular dictating the rhetoric and pace of these movements gaining traction, it happens at a scale and polarization in months that used to take generations.
Regardless, state sanctioned violence is still rampant in many parts of the world, though not on the scale of Tiananmen or post-colonial freedom struggles unless you count the war in Ukraine. Often these are countries that western media pays less close attention to, and is a case in point of politics many in the west can still conveniently ignore -- the never-ending violence in the Gaza strip, Palestinians being de-homed in Israel, continued ISIS activity across the subcontinent, Venezuelan riots and suppression, Chinese suppression of Uyghurs and Tibetans, the Indian farmer protest response and anti-Muslim crackdowns, Malaysia, Philippines, the list goes on...
One can say that the exclusion of politics from HN is itself politics.
Likewise the debate in the comments herein is a manifestation of politics. Is technology entrepreneurship and science better served by having a politics-free zone, like the Olympics? Or is society worse served by having a class of people and an industry operate as if politics is orthogonal to it, as if the whole nature of the enterprise isn't built upon a particular political ethos and system that sustains its current incarnation, possibly at the expense of other classes of people or society as a whole?
Is HN the Galt's Gulch of the social media world, where techies can withdraw from the rest of society because they can?
> Is technology entrepreneurship and science better served by having a politics-free zone, like the Olympics? Or is society worse served by having a class of people and an industry operate as if politics is orthogonal to it, as if the whole nature of the enterprise isn't built upon a particular political ethos and system that sustains its current incarnation, possibly at the expense of other classes of people or society as a whole?
While politics often appeals to morality, I'd argue these are moral and social discussions.
There's no exclusion of politics from HN, and never haws been (since it was renamed from Startup News in 2007) other than a few days in 2016 when we tried a brief experiment with it and got quite decisive results.
I used think politics in itself should be avoided, unless it is related to Tech. So the best place to start would be to flag any submission that has nothing to do with Tech.
We cant avoid politics that has to do with Tech though, App Store guidelines and regulation, Social Media and Internet, China and Russia usage of Tech.
>We cant avoid politics that has to do with Tech though, App Store guidelines and regulation, Social Media and Internet, China and Russia usage of Tech.
That's everything then. Tech platforms have become the primary channels for the discussion of everything, particularly politics, which makes all political issues tech issues.
I’d argue it really started when Edward Snowden was on a plane somewhere over the Atlantic. HN was wall-to-wall with updates and rumors that, frankly, were not particularly interesting, informative or thought-provoking. But the ideological valence of the story was clearly more important.
We got a mini version of this more recently in the Net Neutrality wars.
It’s funny how both of those stories turned out in the long run.
that was short sighted when the forum was started. it's a forum about tech and entrepreneurship, so politics are the main concern. it's as if bloomberg had a policy of talking about finance only and not politics.
That’s not a very useful frame. One could just as easily claim that everything is philosophical, that everything is scientific, that everything is artistic, or that everything is mathematical.
If you squint hard enough, sure, you can apply the adjective you want to just about anything you want. That doesn’t mean that the adjective has no meaning.
I don't think you can say that everything is maniacal without a lot of explanation afterwards and most people not getting whatever point you're trying to make, but sure, for the broader adjectives used to describe core parts of the human experience, everything that humans do or perceive will in some way relate to these.
I ran a cycling forum and thought it could be without politics, but cyclists died in road traffic incident in London that turned out to be predominantly female cyclists due to heavy goods vehicles, and over time I had to relent... it is policies that shape the city planning, the construction industry regulations (trucks with significant blind spots)... and that these deaths were preventable, people were right to be angry, and that a cycling forum couldn't exist without a political element.
I ran a music forum and thought it could be without politics, but music is art and art reflects the feelings of those on council estates and in poverty, with hard backgrounds, and addictions. They are shaped by their environment and through the art attempt to document and also shape those environments. Even for a mostly apolitical band a single song touched upon rape and opened the door to debates on rape culture and the low prosecution rate and the even lower reporting rate. A music forum that tried it's best to avoid politics couldn't exist without a political element.
And here on hacker news, that new app that is in the YC batch that allows someone to sofa surf... that's political but you just didn't know it at the time. AirBnB and so many other companies, apps, tools... have leveraged the gaps in local policies and law to fuel their margins and stock value. It is very difficult to say that even this site could exist without a political element when a lot of the technology and companies that have come about it impact so many people globally in ways that only political and legal tools can protect. I don't really believe this site can exist without a political element.
The only question (IMHO) is whether those discussions can be conducted civilly, with respect and openness, non-adversarially, and with empathy as much as possible.
Tech is currently intensely political. I use Google Docs in the workplace, and Google has apparently just announced they are going to be challenging my use of language and pressuring me to conform to their values. I've never been coerced that way by an art, science or mathematical consultancy. Even the police have never tried something like that!
Now I haven't read the announcement or looked into this feature myself so hopefully I'm misinformed, but the idea is so reasonable and in line with the sort of thing Google would attempt to do that it is easy to believe. They've already made active attempts to swing elections with their YouTube censorship programs; their actions around the Hunter Biden thing look terrible in hindsight. This is politics in a way that most other domains aren't. It is up there with newspapers and news media for having a political slant.
There are many other, less inflammatory topics about Google Docs that could be discussed, though.
In fact, I could easily see one forum discussing the product's language policing and another one discussing its engineering. Yet a different forum might focus on its various successes and failures in gaining market share.
> One could just as easily claim that everything is philosophical, that everything is scientific, that everything is artistic, or that everything is mathematical.
No you get it! You know, in Buddhism, while progressing on the path, they say, first when you see mountains, they are just mountains. Then suddenly you see mountains and they are not mountains anymore. Then slowly you see mountains as mountains again.
Squinting! Yes good word, more squinting!
Hey Siri, define squinting: to look at someone or something with one or both eyes partly closed in an attempt to see more clearly or as a reaction to strong light.
A story about a new IDE is not political. A story about the stand of the US government in the Ukranian war is political. There is some grey area too, but let's not pretend like it is not clear what "political stories" means in this context.
Context absolutely matters. And "some grey area" is really a massive grey area.
Suppose that story - hypothetically - is about an IDE that continuously logs developer activity potentially giving employers more control over workers, well, that's political. Because now that story isn't about the IDE itself, it's actually about worker rights.
Even if that same hypothetical story was really a blogpost by the makers of the IDE outlining the technical details behind such a feature... then it's still a story that fits in a wider debate regarding worker rights. One side will definitely argue that the makers are tone deaf for only providing a "technical solution" without considering it's wider impact.
> A story about the stand of the US government in the Ukranian war is political.
Well, in the same vain, a story got posted this week about SpaceX warding off a Russian attack against it's Starlink constellation over Ukraine. One could focus on the technical details of how that happened and argue that, as such, it's fitting to discuss this on this particular forum.
However, a strict "no politics" rule would be hard to enforce since the story fits into current affairs that affect public opinion regardless. Inevitably, people will expand the discussion by asking questions regarding the involvement of the U.S. in the war.
It's not just the stories that gets posted, but also the intent with which they are posted that matters, the kind of debate that posters try to elicit, and how other commenters try to bend the direction of the debate below different posts.
That's why moderation and curation are important and labor intensive. Voting comments/posts up/down doesn't improve quality of content towards an optimum level. Instead, it's a reflection of the emergent sentiment of the audience of HN, which isn't always based on reason or objective facts. Nor should it be. At the end of the day, every comment / post hides a complex human being raising their voice from their own particular bubble of perception. All one can do is acknowledge that reality and deal with it without falling into fallacies regarding absolute truths or maxims about how reality ideally ought to be.
It's also just a very strange stance to take, since if you listen to most people working in start ups in technology their pitch is almost always expressly political. Whether it's the libertarian principles of some developing the early web, or talk of "democratizing", there's always some political aspect of changing the world.
No, it's the human condition, not limited to some special group called 'politicians'. Politics starts shortly after three toddlers get together. It's part of the continuum of social interaction.
The only time something is not political is when there are excess resources.
As long as there are limited resources relative to demand, the distribution of those resources is politics.
It can be spending money in a household, sharing TV time with your siblings if you only have 1 TV, and it can be copyright and patent law, which gets into how the limited resource of a society’s adjudication system should be used, which can touch on using it for enforcing laws on banned plants, etc and etc.
Land use, public schools, clean air and water, and the most direct political subject of all: income/wealth distribution.
And since income/wealth gap has rapidly increased, far quicker than resources per person in the world has increased, there will be more conflict. Which manifests as politics (before physical violence).
How about "almost everything can be mapped onto a Bell curve" instead? So whereas almost everything can be remotely connected to something else if you look hard enough, there are outliers where the connection is more evident and other outliers where it get's really strained to find a connection. Politics is certainly like that.
But if the politics in everything is all that catches one's attention, then sure. But that doesn't seem all that healthy, and could be one of the reasons young people seem to struggle with more mental health issues nowadays: the demonizing of the other (party) is increasingly venturing into personality traits and identity, instead of focusing on questions of policy.
Being able to plug your ears and call a field apolitical is a matter of your position in society or in your sub community. There's the joke that goes "what are the two sexes? Male and political", and it really does have a grain of truth to it.
But one person’s irrefutable facts are another person’s politics, so it’s hard to separate the two. Better IMHO to focus on keeping it civil rather than try to ban topics (which itself is another act of politics).
Political debate on HN has become unavoidable because tech itself has been politicized.
Of course on some level it always was, "everything is political" etc, but a decade ago most participants saw tech as broadly neutral. What was the political valence of Etherpad or Foursquare?
Today, engineers are asked to implement things like the "inclusivity warnings" that just shipped in Google Docs. The scope of "content moderation" has expanded dramatically. Founders are often explicitly partisan in one direction or another.
And the new engagement goes in both directions. The five most valuable companies on earth are all West Coast tech cos now. Political actors of all types are watching and trying to harness or control tech to a much greater extent than last decade.
> most participants saw tech as broadly neutral. ... What was the political valence of Etherpad or Foursquare?
While it's quite probably that most participants _saw_ it as mostly-neutral, I would claim that was obviously a mis-conception. In 2012, the popularity of smartphones was already having significant cultural effects, effects on alienation and isolation vs interaction of people in public spaces, etc. And that's just one of innumerable examples. FOSS vs. commercial software - definitely a political question, already 40 years ago and even earlier. Energy production and conversion technology - lots of geopolitics depends on who needs how much fossil fuel energy. etc. etc. And when a tech issue has significant political ramifications, you also have interest-holders involved in promoting or trying to block it, making an effort to inculcate the public with certain ideological views on the issue etc.
I skipped Aramco on purpose. It's a vanity valuation.
The true top five each created valuables businesses based on 0-to-1 products.
Aramco didn't create much, certainly nothing worth close to $2T. The Saudi autocrats just list their country's oil reserves (preexisting value, created by nobody) on this state-owned enterprise's balance sheet in order to flex on most-valuable lists.
Politics is also more tribal and emotive than it's ever been. I'm terrible at not getting upset and replying emotionally to perceived injustices when someone frames facts with a bent towards the other side.
Tech is a big part of the escalation. It was much harder and weirder to yell at strangers before social media existed.
I honestly don't know how we get back to normal. I hope we do because I prefer being able to have discussions not heated arguments about politics.
> There are billions of people who do not want to "get back to normal".
Agreed. And I am one of them. People are here thinking this is about "politics", but really it is about economics. And it is probably why they see more "politics" on Hacker News, because it is a VC organization.
There is tribalism because people are suffering. The fact that someone does not see these people in their day to day life conflicts with a reality that billions of others live with everyday. And the people who are starting to feel it more are an ever growing number of people who thought they were well off.
The idea that we should compartmentalize things is really a human malady, a disorder stemming from our discomfort when we see this truth. That somehow we can separate tech from politics from money is delusional.
Political viewpoints seem more polarised than they were 20 years ago, in America is probably started with the rise of the tea party and Palin’s 2008 bid.
It's a consequence of stakeholder capitalism. When companies were publicly okay with just being amoral profit maximizing entities, they only engaged in politics for a near-term, transactional benefit. Now that it's fashionable for them to publicly take positions on political and societal issues, politics must be discussed along side business.
There is a school of thought, primarily from critical theorists and their derivatives, that proposes constant agitation, there is no neutral. E.g. Kendi's anti-racist. As this school of thought has taken root in schools and media, political discussion has expanded to encompass more and more of life. It is the intended result. Fair to say they have been wildly successful.
> I hate the indifferent. I believe that living means taking sides. Those who really live cannot help being a citizen and a partisan. Indifference and apathy are parasitism, perversion, not life. That is why I hate the indifferent.
> The indifference is the deadweight of history. The indifference operates with great power on history. The indifference operates passively, but it operates. It is fate, that which cannot be counted on. It twists programs and ruins the best-conceived plans. It is the raw material that ruins intelligence. That what happens, the evil that weighs upon all, happens because the human mass abdicates to their will; allows laws to be promulgated that only the revolt could nullify, and leaves men that only a mutiny will be able to overthrow to achieve the power.
The choice isn't often so clear cut. In fact I'll take a side here and say that the idea pushed by this quote is actually one of the most poisonous aspects of American culture at the moment. You are either "red" or "blue" or wasting time with your apathy. No, that's utter BS.
I would interpret that quote slightly differently.
Not making a decision is, in itself, a decision with consequences. Indifference is a powerful choice with real consequences to society, just like delaying an important decision can take it out of your hands etc. The side doesn't have to be red or blue, but anything is better than "who cares"
A particularly famous example are the South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone. I don't have a handy list of other people that have made the same or similar statements.
You may not be indifferent, but the vast majority of HN effectively is.
I say effectively because they are very much in favor of a particular political and economic system, but because that political and economic system is the status quo and, if anything, is getting further entrenched, they can effectively not worry about it.
It's not a coincidence that this same political and economic system has enabled the tech world to accumulate so much wealth and social power. It's not a coincidence that the HN readers are the upper caste within the tech world, not the assembly-line workers, the warehouse workers, the delivery workers upon, the restaurant workers, and the many other kinds of workers who work for a tech company or service tech workers, for minimum or close to minimum wage.
| You may not be indifferent, but the vast majority of HN effectively is.
What I want to discuss and engage with on HN is usually very different (and way less political) compared to what I engage with in other social media. So you can't draw any conclusions about me based on my HN behavior alone.
I think the convention is to use “” to give a general quote; > to quote a comment in thread.
And, on the content, HN isn’t filled with indifferent people. But we need to have places for politics and places to avoid politics. Indifference is different from deference—deference to the context.
As far as hacker politics goes, it applies well to the intellectual
sloth of technological determinism, which Veblem and McLuhan
criticised in different ways, and Postman called the most abject form
of surrender.
I assume that readers here do not fall into such ambivalence, since
the very nature of a hacker is to believe in the ability to
meaningfully create and change technology.
I consider it part of our mission to help others overcome the
shrugging, cargo-cult acceptance of whatever tech falls into our laps
and take the active path to designing and using technology toward a
better future for humans. Inescapably, a part of holding values must
be stopping some people from using tech in disagreeable ways. And
since people are guaranteed to disagree on matters, technology is a
new arena of politics and not something that can exist separately
from it.
"Those who really live cannot help being a citizen and a partisan. Indifference and apathy are parasitism, perversion, not life. That is why I hate the indifferent."
It's sort of hinting at a false dichotomy here. You don't have to be partisan to be engaged. There are many nuanced positions and ideas. Perhaps the author lived in a different time or place that doesn't have two main parties acting the way they do today.
Loathe to wade into a political fray on that subject but will just point out that the author was an adherent of the political ideology responsible for the most deaths in the last century. It's hard to believe that the world would not have been better off if a significant number of those ideological adherents were indifferent, even if just as a moderating influence.
Russia was country with super politically apathetic citizens for decades. That attitude was inherited from communism and led to now - heavily authoritarian stayed with no meaningful internal opposition.
Indifferent people are not moderating influence. They easily end up enablers of whoever is the most aggressive one.
These are the kinds of opinions people use to try and radicalize others. In the end, this only serves to reinforce an 'us vs them' perspective on anything someone loud enough signals as important. The texture of nuance is sanded down until there is only Right and Wrong. Now, whoever doesn't hold each of the same endorsed partisan beliefs is the Enemy.
I am saying that the argument that a side must be selected is misused to apply to everything. This has devolved into a checklist of ideas that must be actively endorsed.
> Aren't you in your characterization labeling someone the Enemy?
Those who promote this ideology are enemies of us all.
Edit:
The discussion of politics is now the parroting of endorsed talking points. There is no unique or independent thought and it isn't interesting.
Yeah HN of 2012ish timeframe was very different. Even Reddit didn’t seem nearly as popular. I think this goes for everything (not just forums), but the more popular a forum becomes the worse the content seems to get. I would like to say that the mods and community here have been unreasonably good at keeping up a level of quality that would likely have been long gone any place else.
Yeah. I’d like to avoid a cliché “this forum has changed over time and that is bad!!!” argument - but it definitely does feel like the tone of many discussions is different. I find myself rolling my eyes in frustration and being taken in by it way too often. It’s up for debate if that’s a change in the discussion, or a change in me.
I’ve taken to trying to just immediately click “hide” on any article I see on the homepage that sounds like it might get anywhere near anything controversial - removing the temptation to engage unconstructively completely. And the same with comments to some extent - if there’s a culture-war trigger-phrase in a comment, just hide the tree and move on.
That’s getting harder though - I wouldn’t have expected an article about Netflix subscriber growth to end up with a bunch of top-level comments about “woke politics ruining tech”, for example. It’s often kind for hard to avoid even if you are trying.
And it’s not like “politics” as a subject could be dismissed either. The thing is that articles about Musk buying Twitter or Google making controversial auto-correct suggestions or whatever are inherently both tech and politics. I don’t know how you avoid that - but the atmosphere definitely makes me want to avoid participating all together.
I have to say I have not experienced this, the opposite actually in that I have posted some articles that were shut down quite quickly because they had a political aspect. I personally am a little upset about it because if you cannot discuss political things it indicates a weakness in the platform, but on the other hand maybe it is necessary to avoid it to keep HN relatively amicable.
> 0therwise your definition makes everything political, thus is useless
I think you’re missing the point that everything is political. The definition isn’t useless, it’s just forcing people to think about the consequences of their actions rather than purely thinking about the technology they’re working on.
There is something to what you’re saying, and things like what the EU is doing as a response to the impact or big American Tech companies is probably what is actually interesting to a lot of us. Because it directly impacts how we’re supposed to build solutions as we need to implement more and more bureaucracy into the way we handle data, often in ways, that we need a corporate lawyer to audit because we’re software engineers. Note that I’m not saying this is good or bad, but I do think it’s interesting because it impacts us.
What I don’t personally think is interesting is American politics. The sort of thing where there are two sides, or anything where anyone might write “liberal”. As a European, where we have multiple parties work together, and where many what Americans consider “liberal” is basically the ultra Christian Right wing, is sort weird and uninteresting. Not that I don’t think things like identity politics and what not aren’t important, but maybe not something to be discussed here on HN.
One of the things I find frustrating about talking to Americans online is they often seem to assume your opinions must be defined by the same left-right divide that characterises their politics.
You accidentally signal to them republican or democrat group membership, and with it enemy or in-group status. The ill fitting political box you are then placed in colours all further interactions with that person and all your political opinions are then taken as read.
I suppose you could have an RSS feed of OSS software and libraries and rebroadcast press releases of new versions of software. There are some tech things without politics, but once you get into higher levels such as discussing Uber's business model, politics comes up. Holmes's Theranos trial was as much politics as tech, but still falls in the "tech" space because it impacts future startups.
There is no meaningful political discussion possible here.
In tech, truth matters (a practitioners can share something meaningful). In politics, the truth is essentially irrelevant especially when one side has vastly more resources than any other (the best practitioners are the best liars). Discussions are full of the rehearsal of talking points and astroturfing -- it is boring or give rise to unnecessary emotions.
There are many software engineers here. Most large companies or software projects are overtly political regarding the culture wars since at least 2016 and brutally force speech and thought upon their employees (they diligently avoid economic issues in politics of course).
HN provides a way to escape that. The discussion is not always partisan; many people point out hypocrisy and greed of people who pretend to have pure motives. Those are facts if you follow the money, power structures and inaction on real issues that are obscured by beautiful words.
Almost everything is political. For example, the very existence of large tech monopolies is political. What they do or don't do is political. There are plenty of things related to this we can talk about that are political, but the real problem is being partisan about it.
edit:
If you want to up/down vote in a non-partisan way, up vote comments as to whether they are interesting or likely to lead to interesting discussion rather than just because you agree with them. Reserve downvotes for comments that are uninteresting, diversionary, partisan, etc.
I often post articles that I personally disagree with, but which are interesting and I am interested in what the HN community might have to say about them.
I agree to an extent, but we're also at a point where politics have spilled over into areas where they were a little less common previously. 20+ years ago it was political when Microsoft was in its antitrust fight. Right now, just one example-- social media account bans-- is not only very political, it is extremely partisan and polarizing as well. It is practically impossible to talk about the issue without touching on some aspect of political/social values.
So, it makes sense that politics come up more often because they now intersect more often with technology (or at least much more visibly) than they have previously. Unfortunately a lot of people don't engage constructively in conversations like that, ones where two different viewpoints may come down to core values that are taken as axiomatic. I think HN does a lot better than other venues when discussing these things but I also see a heck of a lot more comments flagged dead with awful, insulting and vile language that are every bit as bad as the worst you'd find anywhere on Reddit.
HN isn't more political now than it used to be. Arguments about HN getting more political / getting ruined by politics go all the way back to 2008 at least.
This is a common enough misconception that I put some effort into writing a standard post for it some years ago—maybe we should put it in the FAQ, I don't know:
Is there a way to find out why a submission got flagged? For my first submission, I’ve submitted a BBC article about Elon’s bid for Twitter (after checking new/front page for duplicate) and it got promptly flagged. I don’t think I’ve broke any rules listed in this, so I’m not sure what I did wrong there.
I believe anyone with a high enough karma can flag submissions, so it might not be that rule-enforced. It won't get banned or hidden unless a moderator is involved, who probably follows a set of rules. I'm not sure at what point the [flagged] tag is added to the submission.
You should receive a response unless your email goes to spam and I fail to fish it out. But the response to the GP question will probably say "Users flagged it. We can only guess why users flag things, but" - followed by what is at best a guess.
I'd guess there are several reasons: i) people get fatigued with reports about the same characters over-and-over, ii) it's mainstream news, iii) it's an extension of a story people have already heard enough about, iv) it's not of interest for any technical reasons.
Didn't personally vote any such story, fwiw. I did find the related details of how companies can rig share sales against incomers to be interesting (and seemingly contrary to market capitalism).
there was an earlier submission: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31025061, so I assume that was the cause. checking frontpage and new is not enough to find dupes, use the search function.
As a young person who has often been exposed to reddit and the rest of the internet's political flame wars, HN has really taught me how to communicate respectfully with people who I don't agree with, which often leads to better understanding of a topic. Thank you, mods
As an old person that's also seen political debate polarise into either flame wars or ideological echo chambers, I also highly value HN as one of the few remaining places where meaningful political discourse is possible.
Even when I completely disagree with my fellow HN, it's valuable to me to have a forum where I can see those views articulated clearly, and where I can even ask questions and get useful responses.
Sometimes I realise a flaw in my thought process when trying to write a HN comment, something that almost never happens on twitter and reddit. And i think its because the community has decided that curiosity is the prime virtue of HN, I really like that.
> Even when I completely disagree with my fellow HN, it's valuable to me to have a forum where I can see those views articulated clearly ...
Yes, this.
"one of the vices of those who would repress the opinions of others is they make themselves prisoners of their own opinions, because they deny themselves the rights and the means of changing them."
- a comment by Christopher Hitchens, referencing a Thomas Paine commentary on a John Milton pamphlet, in a 2006 debate about free expression. Full transcript (v long):
Most of them, honestly. We obviously don't come to a mutual consensus, but for me the value is in an opportunity to understand why other people think differently, and to explain why I think the way I do.
Of course there's a lot of straw man-ing and snide comments. Every now and then though I strike up a conversation with someone I disagree with in a comment chain and I learn something new.
As an older person who's been exposed to the web and IRC for several decades, I've seen all kind of places, some of them well-moderated, and others where verbal violence was recurrent or moderation abusive.
The moderation in HN is good, but the success of the site in a increasing problem. As the audience widens, the Guidelines are less respected. Nowadays, I almost never follow a link posted in HN, and rarely glance at the comments. For the past weeks, I hid one third to one half of the frontpage posts, because I thought they are off-topic. Quoting the Guidelines:
> On-Topic: Anything that good hackers would find interesting. [...] If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic.
I expect to find on HN what most non-hacker sites would not include.
I think HN needs to figure out how to expand the moderation team in a transparent way. The risk of course is introducing all the reddit-esque drama around moderator selection, abuse etc. Stackoverflow has had similar issues, though somehow stumbles along better than reddit. Regardless, there have been some huge thread recently that would have benefited from moderation.
Stackoverflow is completely different. It prioritizes the experience of readers over posters - being the one who asks a question is not a good experience at all, but being the one who searches and finds an answer is really good. What they do have worked really well for this goal, and I have great respect for their initial decision.
I rarely read the articles, but thoroughly enjoy...even the occasional slightly ott political comments...and certainly all of the others.
Sometimes i feel it's a shame that the USA is so predominantly: choose 1 or 0, there is no nuance; whatever you criticise means you're 100% for the other.
But then again, that's all part of the deal, and I'm grateful for it, not against it.
>anything that gratifies one's intellectual curiosity.
That casts a wide net, and something that a segment of HN would find intellectually gratifying and produce good conversation shouldn't be avoided just because traditional media happened to stumble on it too. I try to keep in mind the "probably" modifier, and that other people may be gratified by different content. Generally speaking I only flag clickbait or things that are divisively partisan and probably won't produce any actual conversation.
Then on things like politics... Well, just consider this headline currently on the front page: "Crypto, the Left & Technofeudalism"
Crypto is a massive bit of emerging technology, but it is virtually impossible to separate it from some of the politics and social values involvde. It's pretty much baked to the motivations behind many proponents as well as the people directly working on the tech.
My 5 cents on HN's civility is that people want to have an impact with their posts.
On large forums (large subreddits, Twitter) you have to be very loud to be heard. Being outrageous, knee-jerk reactions easily get eyeballs, and don't require much effort or time, hence those who spend effort and time on a post that takes effort and time to understand are outcompeted. Finding content like that becomes a discoverability problem. There is also bandwagoning, adding your vote to the tally doesn't require much effort, but can feel like having an impact by identifying with the collective impact. Apes together strong.
On small forums it is relatively easier to have an impact, so because you are guaranteed to be discovered you want to increase the quality of the impact. On a large forum the opportunity to be seen can make you ignore the risk of being judged, and bandwagoning is risk-free, on a small forum the focus is on how you are being seen.
On HN specifically most people want to be seen as an insightful, constructive individual. Taking different stances is an established norm here, so the risk is not being upvoted (not discovered, or insightful), or being too downvoted (not constructive). Normally downvotes would also discourage you from taking too different stances, but HN made some smart decisions (you have to have a certain number of upvotes to downvote, can't downvote people replying to you, upvotes and downvotes are not publicly visible, your comment is only greyed out if it has too many downvotes) to encourage different stances and constructive behavior.
Even though you shouldn't post/comment for karma, I really enjoy how easy it is to get up voted comments on HN. Makes it feel like people are actually reading your stuff and that it's a community. Reddit lost that ages ago, unless you join niche subreddit. You can comment on the top voted front page post on HN and still get replies.
Regarding the last paragraph: I wonder whether anyone has done any game-theoretic studies about self-moderated online discussions and which voting mechanisms work most effectively.
> HN has really taught me how to communicate respectfully with people who I don't agree with
What HN is good at is preventing or limiting discussion so that it doesn't turn into a flame war by any side. Whereas today's reddit and much of social media/tech only allows one side to flamebait.
Reddit and most of the internet 10 years ago was a far better place for discussion. It's why reddit became so much popular than HN. If you genuinely wanted to understand a topic better ( whatever it was and however controversial it was ), you'd get all sides of it. Today, it's just one side. Sure, it was wild, but everyone got their say and you could read up on everyone's position. Now, sadly, most of tech is just corporate/media/establishment propaganda.
Not a good heuristic for me as it would make me skip most of the science stuff. For example the Webb space telescope. It certainly won't have any impact of my life.
What baffles me that paywalled sites are allowed. HN seems to be trying to establish a culture where people actually read the article before discussing it, and allowing paywalled sites (to which the majority of readers won't have access) directly conflict with this.
Good point, and a seeming paradox. But I'd suggest that it's mitigated by the clear preponderance of tech-savvy users on HN. Paywalls are flimsy, and can be circumvented pretty easily by people keen to get at the content. I often browse "active" on HN, and if a comment thread is interesting, but based on a paywalled article, I'll get around the paywall to read the article. Often, an HN commenter will have added a link to a non-paywalled version of said article anyway.
[Edit to add: Sometimes, though, I'm already a subscriber to the paywalled content. I'm not a complete leech.]
> Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize.
This is the one we most desperately need a reminder of. The frequent cascades of strawmanning after strawmanning are exhausting to read.
And too often it looks like voting on comments is used for simple agree/disagree, as if we’re a committee needing to form consensus. More often than not, the answer to something is “it’s complicated” and we’d have more meaningful discussions if we had the discipline to judge contributions by helpful/unhelpful.
My favorite aspect of this site is that one might voice an unorthodox or troubling idea so long as one does it respectfully. Rather than an expectation that everyone be highly emotional all the time, people are expected to be a bit more logical and keep their emotions a bit more restrained. I know a lot of people are made upset by that aspect of HN (often because we don't get as visibly upset at stuff), but I find it a refreshing change.
Other sites tend to politicize pretty much everything. This site has some politics, but it doesn't seem to dominate the discussion.
346 comments
[ 2.3 ms ] story [ 291 ms ] threadhttps://web.archive.org/web/20140702092610/https://news.ycom...
You can get earlier like this:
https://web.archive.org/web/2021*/http://www.ycombinator.com...
I'd subscribe to just tech, personal projects, psychology and history if I could.
https://news.ycombinator.com/show
https://news.ycombinator.com/ask
https://news.ycombinator.com/asknew
https://news.ycombinator.com/r/ask
https://news.ycombinator.com/r/ask/new
> Please don't post comments saying that HN is turning into Reddit. It's a semi-noob illusion, as old as the hills.
:(
Surely, if HN had a /web-dev I would stop using it as HN and use it more like I already use the specialized blog pages I already follow.
The tags ended up being pretty interesting. You can even combine them: https://www.laarc.io/l/video|videos
It was neat watching the community figure out which tags to use.
I was thinking something similar recently. I’m uninterested in well over half of the posts that appear on the front page, usually because they involve technical topics I don’t care about. Most HN readers must be similar, each with different needs and tastes.
Then I thought that the perfect solution would be an algorithm that would highlight posts and comments similar to those I’ve liked in the past and hide those I don’t like. Soon I would be seeing only what I want to see, and I wouldn’t be bothered by anything else.
Then a shiver went down my spine, and I decided that HN is best as it is.
https://www.taggernews.com/tags/ https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14337275 (2017)
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23308098
The guideline that "we should post things hackers [users] would find interesting" was good a decade ago, now we've good a ton of people that post their favourite long form articles and Twitter posts. I don't care for history, commentaries on society or personal philosophy musings with my code.
Honestly, I'm not really complaining, at least the quality of the discussion is still higher than elsewhere on the Internet.
Do you believe the only thing hackers should find interesting is "code?"
Again, I don't want to force HN to limits its discussion to tech _only_, I'm just saying that I think it's getting more and more diluted.
Talking politics is, together with discussing your favourite football team or religion, the lowest form of intellectualism: if you agree, it's an echo chamber, if you don't, we're just talking past each other.
You can do this with a time bound (day, week, month, year). Searches within the past 24 hours should turn up active discussions.
The hack I use is to search comments rather than posts, as the latter afford a larger search surface. You risk turning up some digression thread on a topic, but that's an occupational hazard...
Otherwise:
- Click on the "past" titlebar link to see top-ranked posts from the previous day. You can navigate by day/week/month/year through all of HN history.
- Click on the "past" post link to find earlier discussions of a particular story / link, if any.
- Click on the submitted link domain URL to find other items from that particular site.
- See what specific users are submitting. I occasionally find interesting content navigating HN by user rather than by submissions.
- Look to see what's getting submitted on the "New" queue. Voting or flagging early can influence what shows up on HN for discussion.
- Submit your own material. Odds are low, I'm lucky to have one in ten items see any activity. It's a numbers game. Submissions which relate to other recent submissions (but aren't merely fad-chasing) seem to do reasonably well. I turn up numerous older references through other research, some of which seems to do well on HN.
In fact, if you title a post with “How to…” the site will automatically crop those words too, leaving e.g. “Do X.”
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31120094
Hacker News is really not setup for such long threads -- you basically get one top-level comment for the entire page! That's not very engaging. It's just a feeling but it seems some topics are getting an order of magnitude more comments than usual.
Good times.
Higher number of active users?
You can see it in the IDs. HN recently rolled over to 30m. I remember posting a comment about it. That was like a month ago. It’s now past 31m.
Specifically, I often decide partway down a thread that I've read enough of it and want to move to the next one—on HN, this entails scrolling up to the parent comment of that thread to click its [-] or next button, disrupting the flow of reading. The root/parent buttons are supposed to do this for you, but they're only useful if the thread in question is top-level or only one comment deep, which is decreasingly the case with increasingly popular posts.
The click-to-collapse in Reddit is sadly only implemented by some subreddit themes (and in the redesign), but in the default theme the visible bar is still useful for clarifying the level of indentation of a comment following a deeper thread that puts its parent out of view.
Also, is there an accepted name for this sort of 'indentation line'? New Reddit gives them the 'threadline' class, a name I don't see anywhere else. There's something similar in IDEs for collapsing indented code blocks, and the vertical lines in Win32-like tree views seem related, but I can't find any names for those, either. Searching only reveals a few post-redesign Reddit threads complaining about the click-to-collapse being unintuitive. But considering all the 'HN secrets' threads we have here, that seems to make it a perfect fit.
I can think of some with one or two of those attributes but not many that match it all the way around.
It’s not directly monetized so the design is meant to serve the user. In contrast social media design principles are about controlling user behavior to maximize revenue. This means HN is fast, simple, and information dense. Those are desirable properties on any device.
With all due respect, this isn’t a restaurant it’s a McDonald’s.
(Except in this case, it would be the other way around)
In long threads, it's easy to loose track of which parent a given comment is replying to. So I'll click `parent`, which gives me the context I need. But then I have no way to get back to the reply I was reading previously.
https://www.newyorker.com/news/letter-from-silicon-valley/th...
Discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30374040
I love this feature. I’m of a personality which really easily gets baited into flamewars (which is against the guidelines). Being forced to stop after 5 posts forces me into a cooldown period where I can reflect on my behavior. When the shutdown is over I will probably be demotivated enough to continue this recklessness and the probability of me being yelled at by dang goes down with it.
If I have something important to say, it can wait a couple of hours.
Inspired by Stalin, I imagine. I'm nervous to say 'it works', since we don't know really know what's being suppressed or changed.
If you browse any of it chronologically with showdead you'll find tons of completely innocent stuff moderated out from ever showing up before it would’ve ever been visible, quite often on first post for no apparent reason.
Unlike other communities where excess moderation is a concern (a frequent discussion here), you can’t object to a decision publicly. I’m knowingly flouting the abstract version of that fact because I think it objectively contributes to the discussion. But I have every reason to believe even this is going too far.
- mobile issues: text too small, up/down vote not usable
- post text almost unreadable, it should not be lighter than comment text
Myself I am writing this from an app I’ve bought on the App Store.
I am acutely nearsighted so I can still read 2mm tall characters unaided and am well past the point when most humans require corrective lenses for reading.
It's sort of a super power right about now.
So it depends. I dislike large text on my phone. old.reddit.com works just fine for me as well.
If you are looking for an app, I am the developer of HACK which is available on both iOS/MacOS/iPadOS and Android:
https://apps.apple.com/ca/app/hack-for-hacker-news-developer...
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pranapps.h...
A little off-topic, but I'm totally blind (use VoiceOver) and just tried the app on iOS. A few issues:
* Several buttons are unlabelled, so I'm not sure what they do. * Navigating through posts isn't the most efficient (I need to swipe several times to move from post to post). * The relative level of comments within a thread isn't announced (i.e. replies to OP are at level 1, replies to those replies are level 2, etc). Are these indented visually? * Accessibility actions should be added to quickly vote, reply to comments, etc.
Happy to provide additional feedback/model apps that do this well, but I'm not an iOS developer.
Post text is pretty bad, sometimes even on my PC...
- bulleted/ordered
- lists without making each entry its own paragraph.
I discovered it a few days ago. It seems to include a "override CSS" box in the menu, allowing anyone to customize the look of HN.
It is rare (in fact I’ve never witnessed this) that I see someone on Hacker News spout paragraphs of completely inaccurate information and be rewarded with hitting the top of the page. The culture on Reddit is so bad that on more than one occasion I’ve had someone respond to me with nonsense and provide sources that don’t even mention the topic at hand. But because people see links they upvote (and once a post has a positive upvote rating inertia kicks in since people want to agree with the karma score.)
So I disagree, you can manicure rotten eggs all day and they’ll still be rotten. Reddit is rotten and it gets worse every sprint as they introduce more and more Facebook features. The problems with Reddit have only been magnified by the fact that a majority of its users today use it as an app similar to tik tok, and the company is encouraging this. Mainly because what the platform was initially designed as (a top site + forum for the whole internet) isn’t as profitable as being just another gamified and over advertised platform where people can argue about whatever the topic of the day is.
There’s plenty of social media companies out there already I don’t see why Reddit decided to become a worse version of Facebook when it could have charted a different path. I’m bitter I guess, as every other social media company is realizing they need to take a step back and add ways to make discussion more civil Reddit is doing the opposite and their karma system actively helps bad faith actors due to how much it affects the perception if a given post.
I’m completely done with Reddit, the last two times I’ve reinstalled it the UI has added improvements that I don’t want and I haven’t a productive conversation there in over a year.
I'm genuinely not sure what value the karma system adds
Actually HN used to be libertarian as hell with a significant Rand contingent inherited from the Startup community. I feel that HN has mellowed politically over the years as a greater international audience has joined.
There are a lot of forums that are good cuz they just ban annoying people (and that self selects a lot too). When you try to do mental gymnastics to justify removing people from a community suddenly a certain kind of person can show up and ruin it for everyone. (EDIT: that can be a valid choice for a community! Just has consequences)
But HN feels pretty unique in the quality despite being filled with a looooot of people who are, honestly, pretty agressive! The mod team seems to do a pretty good job.
The bans weren’t designed to be an excommunication but an inconvenience. I’d sign up again with another username which they knew was me, and I could stay until I acted like an idiot again and they banned me, etc.
As Noam Chomsky said, "The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum."
The reason I give that quote is because you're not wrong. In other topics you can express all of the absolutely vile and hateful things one might like, all while acting like an absolutely horrible person. So just stop making fun of the political ideology largely espoused by the political establishment and corporate elite, and you'll have no problems. It will be quite interesting to see how history ultimately records the times of today.
[1] - https://babylonbee.com/news/the-babylon-bees-man-of-the-year...
(A lot of awful ones too, of course.)
They are the kind of people who are in majority in HN. They have similar views and when they comment here on HN their views are accepted and prompted more readily.
This makes it a kind of an echo chamber.
All deviants get banned or their comments are greyed out.
Dissenting is not allowed and dealt with severity and finality.
Generally, the less commented upon articles are pretty excellent.
Still, your point is a good one.
It's a car enthusiasts' website in India.
Their forums section[1] is phenomenal.
Their official new car reviews [2] page is thorough. There are owner-reviews of most cars as well [3] (like for instance there's a dozen owner reviews for the BMW X3).
There's no membership fee. You don't need to be a member to read the content; you have to be a member to post content though.
It does not do advertisements of cars themselves (and openly calls out manufacturers who approach them with rewards for favorable reviews) because they believe it's difficult to be critical of manufacturers after accepting money from them for ads.
However, there are ads for non-car products so you might want to keep your ad-blockers on :D
Their moderators have other proper day-jobs. Like, they're doctors, entrepreneurs/business-people, dentists, teachers, pilots, software engineers (!) and everything else under the sun. The reason I mention this is because this website isn't really a source of income for anybody.
Content is moderated heavily, and people in violation of their guidelines [4] are banned (as long as you're civil, use proper English, don't use swear words etc you'll be fine).
[1] https://www.team-bhp.com/forum/
[2] https://www.team-bhp.com/forum/official-new-car-reviews/
[3] https://www.team-bhp.com/forum/team-bhp-reviews/
[4] https://www.team-bhp.com/forum/team-bhp-reviews/announcement...
But I don't think local online communities will ever managed to get established anew again.
I run a number of forums, the largest yielding 250k monthly visitors. It's not huge... But it's 15 years old, very civil, and more interestingly has near zero moderation.
The ones I operate I do so on a simple basis... This forum is default dead, if you as users run it into the ground I'll turn it off as I make no money from it do not have any incentive to tolerate your bs. Make of this space whatever you want, but if you want it to exist then that's something that you all need to make happen by figuring out how to be adults.
It works.
I kill 10 sites for every one that makes it, and the ones that make it are great.
That's interesting, a sort of Darwinian selection pressure towards actual discussion. Though as I type that out it occurs to me that that could be a decent working definition of "good moderation"
Alternate take -it's not a problem and they're actually serving an audience which enjoys that content.
In the case of Netflix specifically, the problems that are driving people away are non-partisan in nature: shows being cancelled early, arbitrary price increases and clamping down on the password sharing policy.
None of those have anything to do with the culture war and everything to do with colossal mismanagement by Netflix. They'd be unchanged even if NetFlix's content was to the right of One America News.
I'm really sorry about your whitewashing narratives (or whatever) but you're either deliberately missing my point and/or trying to hand-wave away from it. If it's the latter, I do not appreciate that.
Thanks.
I mean, there are criticisms to be made about tampering with IP for the sake of sales (https://www.cnet.com/culture/entertainment/features/marvel-i... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship_of_LGBT_issues) but a lot of those decisions often boil down to simple economics (China is a larger audience and the studios cater to that market) but when it starts veering into "$X will not replace us" territory I can't take the complaints seriously -I'm sorry.
I have a hard time believing that the people who do object to the progressive content are the reason for this. They may be a contributing factor but I'm honestly skeptical that the numbers who drop it for that specific reason are signifigant.
Honestly what I have seen here and on reddit etc are more neutral complaints -about service, about series getting canceled, etc.
* Netflix’s worker and labor policy: Being a FAANG it is inevitably interesting to tech workers how one of the big profile companies treads their workers. In a healthy class aware industry this should be a hot topic and indeed an issue in the culture war (as described by Marx himself a century and a half ago). Regardless, as a tech worker my self it is always interesting to see what other tech workers think about our current state of our working conditions.
* Netflix’s role in our entertainment: We are humans after all and like different things, we also like to talk about what we like and do not like. Netflix has been particularly brutal in cancelling loved media before the authors of said media had plans to write more (e.g. GLOW, Sense8, etc.) There are some media critics among us that surely has an interesting take on this, and other cultural critics which can go on about what this means in the broader context of our cultures.
* Netflix’s influence in the shift of how media is consumed: Being an early streaming platform it has inevitably had a huge influence in individualization and the platformization of media, for better or worse. Most HN users consume media and have felt this and have an opinion on this. There are a lot of amateur—and some professional—philosophers among us which like to share their take on the philosophy of consumerism. These takes can indeed be interesting.
I think sites like HN are increasingly prone to this sort of thing as the user base grows and the self-selection filter falters. That's why I distanced myself from posting on HN due to issues I felt were never going to be resolved. It's less tedious to just post somewhere smaller where it's easier to filter out bad faith people and/or maintain post quality.
I LOL'd at this. There's a tremendous lack of tact here.
That's definitely not a ban, it's not silencing either by itself. But it's a solid first step in that direction. And having moderated large groups myself I know you can effectively disallow certain positions by signaling to the rest of the community that you want them shut down.
HN's actual moderation is significantly based on this sort of "soft power" approach, where you're rarely explicitly blocked from saying something and there's no official list of verboten ideas, but you'll get this sort of distributed denouncement.
I don't know that this is actually worse than having a set list of disallowed positions or not. Different tradeoffs for sure and HN seems a lot more socially stable than most message boards over time. But on the other hand (iirc) it has a small and consistent set of mods, so it's hard to tell what's from policy and what's from their vocational aptitude.
What’s a discussion that needs to be had? “Free speech” doesn’t mean freedom from people telling you you’re being juvenile, selfish or paranoid and that we’d like you to do something for the community that supports you.
I have noticed some commonalities across both liberal and conservative leaning forums. You can get dog piled for saying the wrong thing in polite words. Or using the wrong words. Or the wrong tone. Or sometimes failing to say something in a post. People react less to what you said, but what it sounds like you might be saying, treating it as though you had plainly said that thing.
It feels very "Tribalist". The way you speak about things is a shibboleth for the "team" you are on, regardless of what you write. And that is how the community reacts often, regardless of the content of your post.
I definitely think internet trolls bear some blame for it, because this is basically communities being on high alert for bad faith actors and becoming more insular as a result.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
Also, please stop using HN primarily for ideological battle because we ban accounts that do that, regardless of what flavor of ideology they're for or against. Past explanations: https://hn.algolia.com/?sort=byDate&dateRange=all&type=comme...
We detached this subthread from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31130736.
I’ve also seen some individual comments on other threads that really just attack the author of the article in question with ad hominems and totally unnecessary insinuations. Not even political posts but things like the Python typing post from the other day.
They should choose some other infrastructure than whatever the dang system is then. Or maybe open source it and hope AWS makes a dang multi-instance auto-scaling service.
I've seen it's bot moderation posts though and I have to say it's quality work, passes the Turing test for me. Which makes it all the more surprising that no one has spun it into a real product. I'm not a 10x programmer but if they let me have a go at it I could probably throw one together in a weekend in my garage.
I wonder if this is the most routinely violated rule.
I’ll sometimes come across comments like:
> [very insightful, interesting, well thought out comment here.] Edit: Why am I being downvoted?!
I don’t know why it was downvoted, but I would have upvoted if not for the ending. Unfortunately, now I feel obliged to downvote it too.
This is the one that gets my vote. If anything is posted from Twitter it’s almost HN law that 80% of comments have to be complaining about the fact that it’s on Twitter.
Overall though, these guidelines are mostly followed surprisingly well. HN has done a great job building a strong community with a cohesive culture.
[https://wilwheaton.tumblr.com/post/682281458145116160]
It’s a site that gathers people together to post & comment on all the newest tech while at the same time HN itself is host on some of the most basic and boring tech - a flat file based forum.
It's just too hard to find experienced talent to add new features let along troubleshoot complex issues.
I work for a large bank and one thing is for sure that everyone wants to move away from mainframes but it's just such a perilous journey.
And more modern variants are far more reliable.
The other "fancy" tech forum full of new tech and slow as molasses (Reddit) is mostly frequented by the younger, more inexperienced generation of hackers.
Also, Reddit is able to handle millions of users and over a million subreddits while Hacker News nearly collapses if a single thread gets too much traffic. Comparing the two and deciding Reddit was built by less experienced developers with inferior, poorly thought out technology is just ridiculous.
HN is remarkably stable for its size.
Of course it's stable.
[0]https://news.ycombinator.com/item?shownew&id=31026659
[1]https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31027882
As a company I'm not sure whether that means they're doomed or whether they've built a userbase so strong they couldn't kill it if they tried.
Otherwise I prefer the web format of HN a lot against all other similar forums.
It's written in a homemade lisp. That's not boring, that's fun.
I wish this was still the case. Talking about politics used to be avoided here, and certainly engaging in reddit-tier partisan arguing was extremely rare. Now there are political posts almost every day that have comment sections full of mud slinging. I'm guilty of it too, even as recently as today, so I'm not taking a holier than thou position, but man those threads are just incredibly strong flamebait.
There has been a noticeable shift in the way HN engages with political topics over the last couple of years, and more recently in particular.
However, the effects on the QoL of many humans is not a concern to those of us who have the privilege to simply look away and not notice a difference to our own quality of life. This privileged demo has drastically shrunk (ie, politics directly and noticeably impacts the QoL of far more people) today, mostly because the rest of the people have deservedly been given more of a voice. Policy in its present state can mean the difference between life and death for many people who happily steered clear of "politics" 5 years ago, and talking about it is an option for people who were silenced and closeted 10 years ago.
Even those of us who wilfully try to plug their ears and come up a system of rules and restricted topics that are "political" and "to be avoided" will find it incredibly hard to enforce, because someone or other will break the rule, and it's physically impossible for everyone else to keep their peace until a moderator brings the banhammer.
The world is going through shared turmoil right now and politics is naturally a first stop to look for society-level resolutions, or at least adjustments to existing rules to improve QoL.
One way is to focus on difficult questions, on the inevitable trade-offs and on interesting, perhaps less conventional solutions. These debates are supposed to make people think.
The other is to declare all questions settled and focus on rhetorical tactics to suppress the enemy. Stop thinking, start acting, crush the evil enemy, it's about life and death!
In my opinion, this latter form of politics should be kept off HN. Thinking is not a luxury that we can no longer afford once decisions become important to people's lives. It's a necessity at all times and it needs space.
I agree that if it's related like these topics, that it has a place here. One thing that is on here often is the talk about housing density and zoning. I don't think that has a technical tie-in to entrepreneurship or hacking.
That said, I don't really mind as long as the conversation occurs with an open mind and people are bringing new ideas to the table and not just parroting the mainstream takes.
Everything is couched in terms of “with us or against us” extremist dichotomies much like the one hiding in the undertone of your post.
Of course everyone thinks their political views are critical to life the same way people think their religion is important. It’s still super rude to bring up religion in an orthogonal topic and it’s still super rude to do the same with politics.
I think this is generally true, but I also think HN is one of the more open minded places on most of the topics. I think the main problem I have seen in political debates on here are when someone automatically assumes a scientific finding should be policy. In reality, we as a society need to figure out how to apply that finding in a way that balances multiple concerns and fits with society's other rules and values.
Critical thinking skills generally didn't vanish over the past 5, 10, 20, 30 years. That still exists and you can see it in numerous other topics of discussion that don't get so heated. In some spheres of discourse such skills have been overridden by emotion, feelings, however. People are being taught to suppress rational thought and to unleash emotional reaction instead.
What has happened is a cultural shift in which outrage behavior, reaction-to-whatever, being triggered, feelings-as-all-important, et al. has become acceptable and primary. Virtue signaling - which is a resulting disease of this shift - is omnipresent today. That all started to build notably throughout the prior decade and accelerated during the Trump years. Emotional reaction and how strong that reaction is, became a way to win contests intellectually. This primacy of feelings is now being taught throughout the US at all levels and at all times. It's an intellectual disaster, it turns adults into infants emotionally and intellectually. It stunts their growth mentally and it makes them fragile, weak, unable to partake in rigourous debate without shattering down to emotionally acting out (if you're losing in a debate, throw a culturally potent accusation card to end the debate). For a masterclass in this behavior observe Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, when she does something stupid or ignorant, or when she is caught lying, and watch how she avoids responsibility (she acts out very emotionally and immediately begins throwing any and all accusation cards to deflect and shut down discussion); or observe her approach to argumentation generally, she always argues from feelings-as-primary (watch how she uses her hands as she speaks, it's a tip-off); she's out on the tip of the intellectual spear for the US cultural implosion and the impending rise of violent tribalism and highly dysfunctional statism in the US culturally (and it's no coincidence she's an avowed Socialist; 20 years from now if you disagree with her emotions, her brown shirts equivalent - Antifa & Co. - will burn your house down; we're nearly at that level of primative cultural behavior now).
People have gradually come to tolerate outrageous emotional behavior. It's conceptually no different than the broken window theory. Bit by bit more and more emotional, acting-out behavior has become tolerated in the culture. Now it's widespread and the US culture is increasingly a cultural ghetto. When feelings become supreme in the intellectual realm, reason and reasonable behavior loses out every time. The culture that behaves that way will collapse rapidly into tribalism and conflict, lacking the approach necessary to resolve intellectual conflict (turning to feelings and emotion as primary can only end in violent conflict in an intellectual contest, there's no way then to determine right from wrong culturally other than who can shriek the loudest or hit the hardest).
Virtue signaling is a behavior or type of speech that is intended to communicate a political allegiance, or adherence to a specific school of thought.
GP effectively provided a critique of modern political discourse.
What does that have to do with virtue signaling?
With another voting system (CGP Grey YouTube has great videos on this) you'll have more parties meaning you're not put against one "opponent" that you'll always hate.
Your voting system is not democratic (if you're from the US) and I see it as weird how this isn't mentioned more often.
> difference between life and death for many people who happily steered clear of "politics" 5 years ago
> The world is going through shared turmoil right now
You seem to be implying that the political situation has deteriorated and become more violent. Is that so?
In 1968, several students were killed during protests against the Vietnam War. The Civil Rights movement sparked demonstrations and riots during which many people were killed (eg 34 at the Watts riots). The 1992 Los Angeles riots resulted in 63 deaths.
And that's only in the US. In China, you had TianAnMen in 1989. In Germany, you had the Rote Armee Fraktion (Baader-Meinhoff) terror until 1998 with scores of deaths. The Irish Troubles also lasted until 1998 and killed over 3000 people.
So, I'd say it is not worse now than, say, five decades ago. It could be that we have had one or two particularly peaceful decades, but I wonder how much bias there is in that assessment. How could one quantify it, or otherwise try to capture it objectively?
GP comment posits a deterioration over the last 5 to 10 years.
1. That deterioration might be imaginary, due to recency bias. One would need to examine it carefully.
2. That recent deterioration is most certainly embedded within a massive improvement over a longer horizon.
The point was that political discussion became more common on this board in the last five years due to this "deterioration." So whether things are better now than 60 years ago isn't relevant to that point.
> Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith
Adding willful seems to violate these. The first, maybe a stretch, as willful applies to the author and not the argument. But more the second as it does not assume good faith. I think the comment holds the same value without adding willful.
Perhaps not more violent, but there does seem to be more polarization, which is not a good path to be going down. Ezra Klein's 2020 book is an interesting look of the phenomenon in the US:
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_We%27re_Polarized
No, this was not my intended implication at all.
The point was that when PoC raise their voices for BLM, refugee & immigrant rights, or when trans folk rally and protest for trans rights and against transphobic laws, or when anti-vaxxers/maskers force governments to impose mandates and reinstate lockdowns during COVID spikes, or when rural car owners demand lower gas prices forcing nations to conduct business with a war-perpetrator like Russia, it directly affects the quality of life of people who probably don't consider themselves part of these movements -- often mildly disruptive, sometimes largely disruptive, sometimes net positive.
And the implication was that with the internet in general and social media in particular dictating the rhetoric and pace of these movements gaining traction, it happens at a scale and polarization in months that used to take generations.
Regardless, state sanctioned violence is still rampant in many parts of the world, though not on the scale of Tiananmen or post-colonial freedom struggles unless you count the war in Ukraine. Often these are countries that western media pays less close attention to, and is a case in point of politics many in the west can still conveniently ignore -- the never-ending violence in the Gaza strip, Palestinians being de-homed in Israel, continued ISIS activity across the subcontinent, Venezuelan riots and suppression, Chinese suppression of Uyghurs and Tibetans, the Indian farmer protest response and anti-Muslim crackdowns, Malaysia, Philippines, the list goes on...
Likewise the debate in the comments herein is a manifestation of politics. Is technology entrepreneurship and science better served by having a politics-free zone, like the Olympics? Or is society worse served by having a class of people and an industry operate as if politics is orthogonal to it, as if the whole nature of the enterprise isn't built upon a particular political ethos and system that sustains its current incarnation, possibly at the expense of other classes of people or society as a whole?
Is HN the Galt's Gulch of the social media world, where techies can withdraw from the rest of society because they can?
While politics often appeals to morality, I'd argue these are moral and social discussions.
At the same time, not all political stories are on topic. If anyone wants to read about how we draw that line, there are past explanations at https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&so....
It stated in ~2015.
I used think politics in itself should be avoided, unless it is related to Tech. So the best place to start would be to flag any submission that has nothing to do with Tech.
We cant avoid politics that has to do with Tech though, App Store guidelines and regulation, Social Media and Internet, China and Russia usage of Tech.
That's everything then. Tech platforms have become the primary channels for the discussion of everything, particularly politics, which makes all political issues tech issues.
We got a mini version of this more recently in the Net Neutrality wars.
It’s funny how both of those stories turned out in the long run.
Technology is political. Whether it's the nature of architecture (centralised Vs decentralised), or the nature of transparency (proprietary Vs FOSS).
It's all political, imagining that we can fully pretend it's not would be a challenge.
The key is to keep the debate civil, reasoned, rational, respectful.
If you squint hard enough, sure, you can apply the adjective you want to just about anything you want. That doesn’t mean that the adjective has no meaning.
I ran a cycling forum and thought it could be without politics, but cyclists died in road traffic incident in London that turned out to be predominantly female cyclists due to heavy goods vehicles, and over time I had to relent... it is policies that shape the city planning, the construction industry regulations (trucks with significant blind spots)... and that these deaths were preventable, people were right to be angry, and that a cycling forum couldn't exist without a political element.
I ran a music forum and thought it could be without politics, but music is art and art reflects the feelings of those on council estates and in poverty, with hard backgrounds, and addictions. They are shaped by their environment and through the art attempt to document and also shape those environments. Even for a mostly apolitical band a single song touched upon rape and opened the door to debates on rape culture and the low prosecution rate and the even lower reporting rate. A music forum that tried it's best to avoid politics couldn't exist without a political element.
And here on hacker news, that new app that is in the YC batch that allows someone to sofa surf... that's political but you just didn't know it at the time. AirBnB and so many other companies, apps, tools... have leveraged the gaps in local policies and law to fuel their margins and stock value. It is very difficult to say that even this site could exist without a political element when a lot of the technology and companies that have come about it impact so many people globally in ways that only political and legal tools can protect. I don't really believe this site can exist without a political element.
The only question (IMHO) is whether those discussions can be conducted civilly, with respect and openness, non-adversarially, and with empathy as much as possible.
Now I haven't read the announcement or looked into this feature myself so hopefully I'm misinformed, but the idea is so reasonable and in line with the sort of thing Google would attempt to do that it is easy to believe. They've already made active attempts to swing elections with their YouTube censorship programs; their actions around the Hunter Biden thing look terrible in hindsight. This is politics in a way that most other domains aren't. It is up there with newspapers and news media for having a political slant.
In fact, I could easily see one forum discussing the product's language policing and another one discussing its engineering. Yet a different forum might focus on its various successes and failures in gaining market share.
No you get it! You know, in Buddhism, while progressing on the path, they say, first when you see mountains, they are just mountains. Then suddenly you see mountains and they are not mountains anymore. Then slowly you see mountains as mountains again.
Squinting! Yes good word, more squinting!
Hey Siri, define squinting: to look at someone or something with one or both eyes partly closed in an attempt to see more clearly or as a reaction to strong light.
Context absolutely matters. And "some grey area" is really a massive grey area.
Suppose that story - hypothetically - is about an IDE that continuously logs developer activity potentially giving employers more control over workers, well, that's political. Because now that story isn't about the IDE itself, it's actually about worker rights.
Even if that same hypothetical story was really a blogpost by the makers of the IDE outlining the technical details behind such a feature... then it's still a story that fits in a wider debate regarding worker rights. One side will definitely argue that the makers are tone deaf for only providing a "technical solution" without considering it's wider impact.
> A story about the stand of the US government in the Ukranian war is political.
Well, in the same vain, a story got posted this week about SpaceX warding off a Russian attack against it's Starlink constellation over Ukraine. One could focus on the technical details of how that happened and argue that, as such, it's fitting to discuss this on this particular forum.
However, a strict "no politics" rule would be hard to enforce since the story fits into current affairs that affect public opinion regardless. Inevitably, people will expand the discussion by asking questions regarding the involvement of the U.S. in the war.
It's not just the stories that gets posted, but also the intent with which they are posted that matters, the kind of debate that posters try to elicit, and how other commenters try to bend the direction of the debate below different posts.
That's why moderation and curation are important and labor intensive. Voting comments/posts up/down doesn't improve quality of content towards an optimum level. Instead, it's a reflection of the emergent sentiment of the audience of HN, which isn't always based on reason or objective facts. Nor should it be. At the end of the day, every comment / post hides a complex human being raising their voice from their own particular bubble of perception. All one can do is acknowledge that reality and deal with it without falling into fallacies regarding absolute truths or maxims about how reality ideally ought to be.
Only if you’re a politician. Hammers see nails.
The question is, how will we treat each other?
As long as there are limited resources relative to demand, the distribution of those resources is politics.
It can be spending money in a household, sharing TV time with your siblings if you only have 1 TV, and it can be copyright and patent law, which gets into how the limited resource of a society’s adjudication system should be used, which can touch on using it for enforcing laws on banned plants, etc and etc.
Land use, public schools, clean air and water, and the most direct political subject of all: income/wealth distribution.
And since income/wealth gap has rapidly increased, far quicker than resources per person in the world has increased, there will be more conflict. Which manifests as politics (before physical violence).
How about "almost everything can be mapped onto a Bell curve" instead? So whereas almost everything can be remotely connected to something else if you look hard enough, there are outliers where the connection is more evident and other outliers where it get's really strained to find a connection. Politics is certainly like that.
But if the politics in everything is all that catches one's attention, then sure. But that doesn't seem all that healthy, and could be one of the reasons young people seem to struggle with more mental health issues nowadays: the demonizing of the other (party) is increasingly venturing into personality traits and identity, instead of focusing on questions of policy.
Of course on some level it always was, "everything is political" etc, but a decade ago most participants saw tech as broadly neutral. What was the political valence of Etherpad or Foursquare?
Today, engineers are asked to implement things like the "inclusivity warnings" that just shipped in Google Docs. The scope of "content moderation" has expanded dramatically. Founders are often explicitly partisan in one direction or another.
And the new engagement goes in both directions. The five most valuable companies on earth are all West Coast tech cos now. Political actors of all types are watching and trying to harness or control tech to a much greater extent than last decade.
While it's quite probably that most participants _saw_ it as mostly-neutral, I would claim that was obviously a mis-conception. In 2012, the popularity of smartphones was already having significant cultural effects, effects on alienation and isolation vs interaction of people in public spaces, etc. And that's just one of innumerable examples. FOSS vs. commercial software - definitely a political question, already 40 years ago and even earlier. Energy production and conversion technology - lots of geopolitics depends on who needs how much fossil fuel energy. etc. etc. And when a tech issue has significant political ramifications, you also have interest-holders involved in promoting or trying to block it, making an effort to inculcate the public with certain ideological views on the issue etc.
You’re forgetting saudi aramco.
The true top five each created valuables businesses based on 0-to-1 products.
Aramco didn't create much, certainly nothing worth close to $2T. The Saudi autocrats just list their country's oil reserves (preexisting value, created by nobody) on this state-owned enterprise's balance sheet in order to flex on most-valuable lists.
Tech is a big part of the escalation. It was much harder and weirder to yell at strangers before social media existed.
I honestly don't know how we get back to normal. I hope we do because I prefer being able to have discussions not heated arguments about politics.
There are billions of people who do not want to "get back to normal".
The contention between those who support and preserve the status quo and those who want to evolve or overturn it is the essence of politics.
Agreed. And I am one of them. People are here thinking this is about "politics", but really it is about economics. And it is probably why they see more "politics" on Hacker News, because it is a VC organization.
There is tribalism because people are suffering. The fact that someone does not see these people in their day to day life conflicts with a reality that billions of others live with everyday. And the people who are starting to feel it more are an ever growing number of people who thought they were well off.
The idea that we should compartmentalize things is really a human malady, a disorder stemming from our discomfort when we see this truth. That somehow we can separate tech from politics from money is delusional.
> The indifference is the deadweight of history. The indifference operates with great power on history. The indifference operates passively, but it operates. It is fate, that which cannot be counted on. It twists programs and ruins the best-conceived plans. It is the raw material that ruins intelligence. That what happens, the evil that weighs upon all, happens because the human mass abdicates to their will; allows laws to be promulgated that only the revolt could nullify, and leaves men that only a mutiny will be able to overthrow to achieve the power.
- Antonio Gramsci
Not making a decision is, in itself, a decision with consequences. Indifference is a powerful choice with real consequences to society, just like delaying an important decision can take it out of your hands etc. The side doesn't have to be red or blue, but anything is better than "who cares"
And this is why so much energy is spent convincing you that your vote doesn't matter or that both sides are the same, etc.
I say effectively because they are very much in favor of a particular political and economic system, but because that political and economic system is the status quo and, if anything, is getting further entrenched, they can effectively not worry about it.
It's not a coincidence that this same political and economic system has enabled the tech world to accumulate so much wealth and social power. It's not a coincidence that the HN readers are the upper caste within the tech world, not the assembly-line workers, the warehouse workers, the delivery workers upon, the restaurant workers, and the many other kinds of workers who work for a tech company or service tech workers, for minimum or close to minimum wage.
What I want to discuss and engage with on HN is usually very different (and way less political) compared to what I engage with in other social media. So you can't draw any conclusions about me based on my HN behavior alone.
And, on the content, HN isn’t filled with indifferent people. But we need to have places for politics and places to avoid politics. Indifference is different from deference—deference to the context.
As far as hacker politics goes, it applies well to the intellectual sloth of technological determinism, which Veblem and McLuhan criticised in different ways, and Postman called the most abject form of surrender.
I assume that readers here do not fall into such ambivalence, since the very nature of a hacker is to believe in the ability to meaningfully create and change technology.
I consider it part of our mission to help others overcome the shrugging, cargo-cult acceptance of whatever tech falls into our laps and take the active path to designing and using technology toward a better future for humans. Inescapably, a part of holding values must be stopping some people from using tech in disagreeable ways. And since people are guaranteed to disagree on matters, technology is a new arena of politics and not something that can exist separately from it.
This includes tech-related politics.
It's sort of hinting at a false dichotomy here. You don't have to be partisan to be engaged. There are many nuanced positions and ideas. Perhaps the author lived in a different time or place that doesn't have two main parties acting the way they do today.
Indifferent people are not moderating influence. They easily end up enablers of whoever is the most aggressive one.
Are you suggesting arguing against indifference is "radical"?
Aren't you in your characterization labeling someone the Enemy?
> Aren't you in your characterization labeling someone the Enemy?
Those who promote this ideology are enemies of us all.
Edit: The discussion of politics is now the parroting of endorsed talking points. There is no unique or independent thought and it isn't interesting.
I’ve taken to trying to just immediately click “hide” on any article I see on the homepage that sounds like it might get anywhere near anything controversial - removing the temptation to engage unconstructively completely. And the same with comments to some extent - if there’s a culture-war trigger-phrase in a comment, just hide the tree and move on.
That’s getting harder though - I wouldn’t have expected an article about Netflix subscriber growth to end up with a bunch of top-level comments about “woke politics ruining tech”, for example. It’s often kind for hard to avoid even if you are trying.
And it’s not like “politics” as a subject could be dismissed either. The thing is that articles about Musk buying Twitter or Google making controversial auto-correct suggestions or whatever are inherently both tech and politics. I don’t know how you avoid that - but the atmosphere definitely makes me want to avoid participating all together.
Technology is a crucial development impacting society. Of course discussing tech is political. How could it not be?
0therwise your definition makes everything political, thus is useless
I think you’re missing the point that everything is political. The definition isn’t useless, it’s just forcing people to think about the consequences of their actions rather than purely thinking about the technology they’re working on.
What I don’t personally think is interesting is American politics. The sort of thing where there are two sides, or anything where anyone might write “liberal”. As a European, where we have multiple parties work together, and where many what Americans consider “liberal” is basically the ultra Christian Right wing, is sort weird and uninteresting. Not that I don’t think things like identity politics and what not aren’t important, but maybe not something to be discussed here on HN.
You accidentally signal to them republican or democrat group membership, and with it enemy or in-group status. The ill fitting political box you are then placed in colours all further interactions with that person and all your political opinions are then taken as read.
HN provides a way to escape that. The discussion is not always partisan; many people point out hypocrisy and greed of people who pretend to have pure motives. Those are facts if you follow the money, power structures and inaction on real issues that are obscured by beautiful words.
Off-topic: partisan politics
Almost everything is political. For example, the very existence of large tech monopolies is political. What they do or don't do is political. There are plenty of things related to this we can talk about that are political, but the real problem is being partisan about it.
edit:
If you want to up/down vote in a non-partisan way, up vote comments as to whether they are interesting or likely to lead to interesting discussion rather than just because you agree with them. Reserve downvotes for comments that are uninteresting, diversionary, partisan, etc.
I often post articles that I personally disagree with, but which are interesting and I am interested in what the HN community might have to say about them.
I don't think this is true, take a look at the top posts a decade and so ago:
https://hn.algolia.com/?dateEnd=1325376000&dateRange=custom&...
A few examples:
- Paul Graham: SOPA Supporting Companies No Longer Allowed At YC Demo Day (1716 points)
- A new approach to China (1145 points)
- GoDaddy supports SOPA, redditor proposes "Move your Domain Day" (1103 points)
- Enough Is Enough (1019 points)
So, it makes sense that politics come up more often because they now intersect more often with technology (or at least much more visibly) than they have previously. Unfortunately a lot of people don't engage constructively in conversations like that, ones where two different viewpoints may come down to core values that are taken as axiomatic. I think HN does a lot better than other venues when discussing these things but I also see a heck of a lot more comments flagged dead with awful, insulting and vile language that are every bit as bad as the worst you'd find anywhere on Reddit.
This is a common enough misconception that I put some effort into writing a standard post for it some years ago—maybe we should put it in the FAQ, I don't know:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17014869
One has to be careful not to fall prey to whatever bias it is that always makes it feel like things are getting worse.
Didn't personally vote any such story, fwiw. I did find the related details of how companies can rig share sales against incomers to be interesting (and seemingly contrary to market capitalism).
Other HN users flag. If you think it was flagged in error you can email HN.
Even when I completely disagree with my fellow HN, it's valuable to me to have a forum where I can see those views articulated clearly, and where I can even ask questions and get useful responses.
Yes, this.
"one of the vices of those who would repress the opinions of others is they make themselves prisoners of their own opinions, because they deny themselves the rights and the means of changing them."
- a comment by Christopher Hitchens, referencing a Thomas Paine commentary on a John Milton pamphlet, in a 2006 debate about free expression. Full transcript (v long):
https://scrapsfromtheloft.com/culture/debate-freedom-of-expr...
Of course there's a lot of straw man-ing and snide comments. Every now and then though I strike up a conversation with someone I disagree with in a comment chain and I learn something new.
The moderation in HN is good, but the success of the site in a increasing problem. As the audience widens, the Guidelines are less respected. Nowadays, I almost never follow a link posted in HN, and rarely glance at the comments. For the past weeks, I hid one third to one half of the frontpage posts, because I thought they are off-topic. Quoting the Guidelines:
> On-Topic: Anything that good hackers would find interesting. [...] If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic.
I expect to find on HN what most non-hacker sites would not include.
>anything that gratifies one's intellectual curiosity.
That casts a wide net, and something that a segment of HN would find intellectually gratifying and produce good conversation shouldn't be avoided just because traditional media happened to stumble on it too. I try to keep in mind the "probably" modifier, and that other people may be gratified by different content. Generally speaking I only flag clickbait or things that are divisively partisan and probably won't produce any actual conversation.
Then on things like politics... Well, just consider this headline currently on the front page: "Crypto, the Left & Technofeudalism"
Crypto is a massive bit of emerging technology, but it is virtually impossible to separate it from some of the politics and social values involvde. It's pretty much baked to the motivations behind many proponents as well as the people directly working on the tech.
On large forums (large subreddits, Twitter) you have to be very loud to be heard. Being outrageous, knee-jerk reactions easily get eyeballs, and don't require much effort or time, hence those who spend effort and time on a post that takes effort and time to understand are outcompeted. Finding content like that becomes a discoverability problem. There is also bandwagoning, adding your vote to the tally doesn't require much effort, but can feel like having an impact by identifying with the collective impact. Apes together strong.
On small forums it is relatively easier to have an impact, so because you are guaranteed to be discovered you want to increase the quality of the impact. On a large forum the opportunity to be seen can make you ignore the risk of being judged, and bandwagoning is risk-free, on a small forum the focus is on how you are being seen.
On HN specifically most people want to be seen as an insightful, constructive individual. Taking different stances is an established norm here, so the risk is not being upvoted (not discovered, or insightful), or being too downvoted (not constructive). Normally downvotes would also discourage you from taking too different stances, but HN made some smart decisions (you have to have a certain number of upvotes to downvote, can't downvote people replying to you, upvotes and downvotes are not publicly visible, your comment is only greyed out if it has too many downvotes) to encourage different stances and constructive behavior.
What HN is good at is preventing or limiting discussion so that it doesn't turn into a flame war by any side. Whereas today's reddit and much of social media/tech only allows one side to flamebait.
Reddit and most of the internet 10 years ago was a far better place for discussion. It's why reddit became so much popular than HN. If you genuinely wanted to understand a topic better ( whatever it was and however controversial it was ), you'd get all sides of it. Today, it's just one side. Sure, it was wild, but everyone got their say and you could read up on everyone's position. Now, sadly, most of tech is just corporate/media/establishment propaganda.
It's sad this is true for the world as well. Almost all news is off-topic for your life.
A good question to ask: does this have any impact on my life? If you are unsure or the answer is no: skip that news.
This is a great point, I should try to remember to do this in general.
[Edit to add: Sometimes, though, I'm already a subscriber to the paywalled content. I'm not a complete leech.]
This is the one we most desperately need a reminder of. The frequent cascades of strawmanning after strawmanning are exhausting to read.
And too often it looks like voting on comments is used for simple agree/disagree, as if we’re a committee needing to form consensus. More often than not, the answer to something is “it’s complicated” and we’d have more meaningful discussions if we had the discipline to judge contributions by helpful/unhelpful.
Other sites tend to politicize pretty much everything. This site has some politics, but it doesn't seem to dominate the discussion.