Startup News Becomes Hacker News (2007) (ycombinator.com)

9 points by hobohazard ↗ HN
It occurred to me tonight that apart from the many other things YC gets right, what really makes them shine is HackerNews. I'd even say, YC couldn't have been what it is now without it. In my eyes, their biggest accomplishment is has been the wealth of information aggregated in their news portal.

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don't say anything in a comment thread that you wouldn't say in person.

This one simple rule should keep comment quality high, but it's so hard to remember and follow. Maybe PG should always display it when someone's typing a comment.

It's followed here much more often than in other "known" discussion sites, other than perhaps metafilter.

I haven't been incredibly active for a while, and I remember one distinct downturn in the quality of discussion, likely due to a surge in popularity, but it was responded to, and from what I can tell the popularity surge didn't have the same accretion of annoyance as it could have.

Sure, it's easy to get caught up in the moment, but honestly it's not that hard to do that in real life either. As such, I think "don't say anything in a comment thread you wouldn't say in person" should be followed by "if you do, or someone else does, resolve it like you would in person". That is, in a community that cares about itself and is comprised of people with strong opinions, admission of being rash and apologies go a long way.

I personally prefer occasional taps on the shoulder to individuals in a community by members of the community than a constant reminder-banner. The banner just becomes noise, the "hey, stop that" is not so much.

The curiosity point is a good one. I often find at the end of a day that I've read most of the posts on the front page here, even on sites that I probably wouldn't have browsed to of my own volition.

What HN brings in addition to that though is real social validation. If the HN crowd have voted up a story, I usually know its worth being curious about.

Social validation goes further than the site. HN for me is not only a filter for quality news but also for quality people. I'll gladly meet up IRL with a HN user I haven't met before, Reddit & other niche interest sites not so much. Also, "Are you on HN?" makes a great job interview question.
YC couldn't be what it is without Hacker News. It's amazing what a pivotal role it's played in their success, yet its importance goes unnoticed. In my eyes, their greatest achievement to date has been the wealth of information accumulated in this news portal and community behind it.