Poll: Should we ban TechCrunch?

87 points by andr ↗ HN
Ask YC: Ban TechCrunch?

I know this was discussed a few months ago, but I think TechCrunch has significantly changed for the worse over that time. It is too biased and unprofessional to serve the important role in the startup community that it has assumed. My 3 problems with TechCrunch are:

1) Strong negative bias

TechCrunch has started personal vendettas against Last.fm (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/05/22/deny-this-lastfm/ http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/20/did-lastfm-just-hand-over-user-listening-data-to-the-riaa/ http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/05/23/another-blanket-denial-by-lastfm/) where they continously bring strongly trust anonymous reports but practically ignore official statements from Last.fm and CBS. Furthermore, all those posts were made entirely based on anonymous sources, without reaching the Last.fm/CBS parties for comment.

2) Strong positive bias

The last 500 posts on TechCrunch contain 1200 mentions of Twitter. Twitter is clearly getting more TC coverage than any other startup in existence. Twitter and Twitter Search are always mentioned as a source, but you'd never see the phrase "a Google search reveals..". On top of that, TC covers random and uninmportant events such as a 104-year old woman using Twitter (followed by a denial), an astronaut using Twitter (followed by a denial), a cat using Twitter, Kanye West not being happy with Twitter, ad nauseam.

3) Censorship

There are reports of people that had their comments deleted from TC because they argued againt TC's position. The most recent example is http://twitter.com/alexmuller/status/1903186356

Should TechCrunch be banned from News.YC?

140 comments

[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 232 ms ] thread
Do you feel newbies are being misled? Isit not the case that older hands are sufficiently aware of TC's proclivities? Is it not enough simply to flag the contributions when they are clearly wrong, or down-mod stupid, irrelevant or content-free comments?

What would banning them add? Is it impossible that they might yet say something useful?

>> "Is it impossible that they might yet say something useful?"

I'm struggling to remember the last useful TC 'article'. Any example?

edit: It's quite hard to remember a TC article that didn't mention twitter also ;)

Maybe it'd be better to just create 2 front pages - one with everything, and one which removes some of the less useful gossip sites.

I agree with the OP - in the last few months TC seems to have descended into gossip and rumor.

The last useful techcrunch article I recall was them covering the youtube website before anyone else.
Agreed. But how much does that benefit outweigh the obvious negative? And is the amount of bile being spewed by the TechCrunch writers good for the startup community?
You can't downvote submissions and TC is great at linkbait headlines, which get upvoted before people read the actual post. That's the problem.
Agreed. And you can't undo an upvote :(
You can flag submissions, you can learn not to up-mod something before you actually read it, and you always just not click on the link!

There's a parallel here with language choice. Some languages let you shoot yourself in the foot, and others try desperately to protect you. Newbies might need and benefit from the protection, power users often get frustrated at being prevented from doing things.

My principle is: when there's a balance to achieve, don't forbid things.

flagging doesn't guarantee removal though does it? Flagging an article IS a way to note you think it is wrong, or malicious etc. BUT it is a private thing.. there is no indication how many others agreed etc.

Perhaps adding the # of flags might be an option (or some indication)

> you can learn not to up-mod something before you actually read it

Others would need to learn that.

This suggestion may seem a little odd, but how about only enabling the up arrow once the URL has been visited? (via that javascript visited link colour trick, perhaps) It won't stop deliberate thoughtless upvoting, but nothing will.
I'm gonna go with ban but not categorically. I'd guess most of us have TC in our RSS feeds. We don't need reposts to HN for every new blurb that comes along. Rarely there is an interesting tidbit that merits discussion here. Rarely. We don't really need to use HN as an aggregator.

That said, the voting system does a decent job of keeping excessive TC off the front page. Lets just agree to think about the kind of discussion that can be had about each TC submission and act accordingly.

I'm reading it in an rss reader, and likes it, it's tech porn. I can live with banning, but I hope for the sake of the readers here that banning be overruled when they come up with some really interesting stuff, which may happen. That makes me a voter for moderation of TC, but against rigid banning.
You could do what I do and just not click on any link to a TechCrunch article.
AND/OR - if you think its a biased reporting then you may also comment about it everywhere (HN, Techcrunch, etc.) - though you may have to provide more details about why you think its a biased reporting, this way you'll gain creditability and put techcrunch on their toes about their own prestige and reputation ...
What's the bet that if this poll is for the ban, there will be a negative post about HN? :))
TechCrunch is a value source of information. When you ban all different voices, you end up with a site where everyone is saying exactly the same thing all the time, and it will increasingly attract the same type of demographic. This will result in an intellectual mono-culture.
What is the purpose of this ban? To tell: TC we dont like you!?
My suggestion is to limit the number of stories that can be submitted and/or made popular in a day. So if one story makes it to the front page in the past 24 hours, news submissions from the same site are disabled.

The time period can be manipulated (12 hours, one week, whatever).

This will limit the effect of TC and a few other sites that are very frequent front-pagers without merit IMHO.

That seems rather random. What if there actually are two good articles from the same site within 24 hours?
If you don't like TechCrunch, "ban" it for yourself, why do you need a collective approval for this? Sorry, I think HN does not deserve polls like this one.
In that case, why is valleywag banned?

http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=160704

Collective screening of linkbait/spam articles is useful IMHO.

because it's banned, I just had this great nostalgic moment. "Remember when ValleyWag used to clog news.yc with crap?" Glad those days are behind us.
You haven't provided nay supporting arguments for what makes VW different from TC or CH.
Valleywag is specifically about insulting individuals involved with companies. TechCrunch focuses on breaking news, even when a good deal of the time it's crap, and CodingHorror might be uneducated but Jeff Atwood is still writing things that are relevant to this site. We don't need articles about Julia Allison and Tina Fey.

I think Valleywag is actually better-written than those other two. It just happens to be completely off-topic.

i wasn't attempting to justify either. I was merely remebering the days when VW littered the front page. I sometimes feel the same about TC, as well, but TC does tend to feature interesting startups I'd have otherwise missed. And in my opinion the signal to noise ratio on their rss is too low to justify subscribing
Yes, screening is OK, but banning the whole site just because you don't like them is nonsense.
Read the OP. This isn't about "Not liking TC", it's about the quality of journalism they have been displaying lately.
Lately? That's a joke.

Because of TC's journalistic standards, I forbade my team members from talking to TC about our stealthy project... 18 mos ago.

I can say that statements in the poll definition are very arguable, and can be easily dictated by the author's personal attitude. (You say - "Strong negative bias" and would qualify this as a "Journalist investigation").
They used a screen-grab of an email to bolster their case! As if that adds credibility :/
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Banning TechCrunch would be awkward for pg.
I don't think PG can ban TechCrunch articles.

TechCrunch covers all YC startups and PG provides them with thousands of hits via HN. Win win for both $$$, PR for startups and AD money for techCrunch.

Anyone think otherwise? Am I wrong?

Instead of a ban, we should allow users to create filters. I would filter TechCrunch and codinghorror.
The world already has a Reddit.
IIRC PG doesn't want to implement that because the quality of the front-page would presumably diminish if people could selectively ignore sources of low quality for themselves.
How do you explain not being about to down-vote submissions?
You know, it occurred to me if you're committed, you could just vote up all the other stories. Same effect.

There's flagging, too, of course.

Why do you think selective filtering would ruin the front page? It's the equivalent of "don't click on Techcrunch articles", but it makes it much easier and removes the visual nag.

(For that matter, has there ever been a social news site whose primary method of filtering links was letting each individual user ignore things? It might be an interesting way to maintain a community.)

For the same reason cities suffer when people flee to the suburbs. If individuals can personally opt out of public problems, they have no incentive to work to solve them. In this case by flagging offtopic posts and criticizing mistaken ones in the comments.
You're equating a physical reality with a virtual one. The whole of the Internet is about filtration. There's no "real" location that grows worse or that requires effort.

Besides, a per-site filter won't stop offtopic posts from being flagged, or debates from starting. They'll only allow certain people to ignore certain posts, which those people want to do anyway. I for one wouldn't block TechCrunch, and I'm certain many more would keep reading it as well.

A place doesn't have to be physical to be a community.
But a community doesn't suffer when it lets its more extreme members ignore the things that would provoke them.
A less than 10 line Greasemonkey script would solve that.
Ditto, ditto, ditto. I was about to suggest the same thing.
Oops, this was meant to be a reply to the filters suggestion. Sorry.
There are a number of Yahoo Pipes filters set up ready to go. Useful if your gateway into HN is through rss.
Would it be possible to have a list of 'I don't want these' sites in our profiles, so I'm able to enjoy HN without every 8th link being for TC, but other more masochistic readers can have all the TC they can endure?
Maybe, but we still have to decide whether or not to show them to anonymous readers.
I'm afraid I happen to like TechCrunch.

Techcrunch is a news outlet, it writes about what people want to read. The internet is MUCH bigger than you and I my friend.

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Twitter is clearly getting more TC coverage than any other startup in existence...On top of that, TC covers random and uninmportant events such as a 104-year old woman using Twitter (followed by a denial), an astronaut using Twitter (followed by a denial), a cat using Twitter, Kanye West not being happy with Twitter, ad nauseam.

This happened with Facebook too and to some extent Youtube. In my opinion TC are doing the same as most of the media:

People join X social networking site

Media writes about X site

People feel positive with a "hey, they're talking about X, I use X. This publication/site is relevant to me" feeling

More people join X

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I see a lot of comments discussing the quality of TC's scurrilous writing. May I suggest you ignore that? TC itself is almost irrelevant to the question of banning. Even if it is false, linkbaiting dreck. Instead of considering the quality of the links, try looking at the quality of HN discussions about those links.

Do HN discussions add insight and interest? Do they raise or lower the quality of discourse here?

Some discussions devolve very quickly into name-calling, negativity, and mindlessness. Some elevate into insightful observations and positive debate. Look at the discussions and think about whether HN should encourage or discourage them.

My thought is that if TC discussions on HN are positive, there should be no ban regardless of the quality of the links. But if there is a preponderance of negative discussions around its links, it may be in HN's interests to simply walk away without any further ado.

If I were less time-poor I would resume maitaining a set of Greasemonkey scripts to filter out Tech Crunch and the like from HN and aggregation/community sites I visit. However it would be nice if PG would whip up a user-specific "ignore-these-domains" field in the user prefs. (Just a text box for a comma-separated list would suffice.)

The thing that annoys me about TC is that their headlines are so inflammatory that I just have to click them to find out what they're beating up now, and always instantly regret it. Perhaps the key is developing better self-control.

A ban would allow no incentive for them to change their behavior.

As it is, the up/down voting gives them feedback on an post-by-post basis as to what matters to HNers. [ Just in case they care. ]

In regard to one post: Let's not "protect" noobs from "bad info" - except to the extent that we noobs can see what the overall HN population thinks of value of specific articles. That is the power of what HN has to offer to begin with! --and it gives more feedback about specific articles (e.g., if there is no (or few) upvotes) than if no feedback at HN existed about particular posts.

HN's total traffic is 1/12th of TechCrunch's. I doubt HN visitors click on many ads, either. So I don't think our opinion will strongly affect TC's editorial policy. I'm sure their style is a very concious decision.
I think we should ban polls about banning TechCrunch.
Lets go the whole hog and ban comments suggesting we ban polls about banning TechCrunch.
axod, I'm starting to think you've got a vendetta against TechCrunch. Did they give your startup a bad review?
samson, As we all know, if your startup plan relies on getting a review on TC, you're going to fail.

Some people are living in a bubble, so they think a review on TC matters.

My gripe with TC is that lately, most of their articles have been based on "anonymous sources" or gossip. Having said that, I don't really mind too much either way if they're banned or not. I'd much rather they started reporting unbiased facts and news.

Real estate is important and for every link to techcrunch, and for that matter, cnn, nytimes, washingtonpost, and all the other mainstream sources there is less room for somethign outside the mainstream and finding that stuff outside the mainstream is why I have liked HN so much in the past.

The lack of that kind of watered-down-for-the-masses content is why I found HN so appealing. I would much rather read hacked together transcripts from Dijkstra's brain.

It's not so much that I have something against those publications, but rather that it is easy to get that content somewhere else. People forward it or it's at digg or something.

Which niche is HN meant to fill?

It seems like as the population of a community approaches infinity, the mainstreamness of the content approaches 100%.

Agreed, but I actually would rather have 2 links to TechCrunch than one to NYT. At least, TC is about technology and start-ups. Should we ban NYT?
I say ban them both...
threads like these are why polls like these are bad. I'm serious, this is a reddit thread.
Worse yet, it made me laugh.
I love pun threads, and iterative permutations, and trite references to internet memes. I just don't like them here.
You're right. It was saturday night. I'd had a few too many egg-nogs. Won't happen again.
Totally agree. I posted one post. I think it expressed a simple, clear sentiment, not a joke. I can't really take the blame for the fact that others perceived it as a joke and added one-liners to it.
Let's get crazy and ban comments that suggests we ban comments suggesting we ban polls about banning TechCrunch. -> not funny anymore I guess :-)
What the hack is your problem? If you don't like it then don't vote it. Who are you to impose your will over everyone else?
First off I am not a fan of TC at all - I actually do read some of the articles but only through 3rd linkage.

That said I think CHOICE is a good thing. For example I filter CodingHorror and TechCrunch (and a few others - Seth Godin is the only major one that springs to mind) for a variety of reasons. I chose not to view them. But some people do like to read them (even if it is just for a laugh ;)). If you want to ban them there is a Userscript to filter them, if not, then dont :D

I personally have lost all respect for TC recently: poor reporting, poor sourcing, extreme attention grabbing headline, petty squabbling and generally insulting pointless stuff :P But that is just my opinion, others might find it relevant! Were hackers not censors.

You can ban all the sites you like, but it won't stop the decline of critical thinking on HN.
I am not sure what loss of "critical thinking" you are referring to.

I don't think anyone is losing mental marbles, nor do are stories getting that bad. (Admittedly, I couldn't stand the stories a month or two, but things seem to be on the upswing again). The discussion is usually interesting for any highly-moderated story on the front page.

Ironically, questioning the mental prowess of other posters without mentioning a rationale for it contributes to a decline in quality of the conversation taking place. Maybe you could be more specific?

There's no loss of "mental marbles," that implies insanity rather than a lack of a faculty most people don't have to begin with.

Are individual people losing it? Probably not.

But I point out logical inconsistencies where I see them, and when people miss the big picture (which is often) of a given problem or discussion.

Take the once-a-week discussion of pro-formal ed/anti-formal ed. It's always the same, the same ego-stroking and ego-defense, and most people are clearly working purely off their own biases, without even the benefit of having read any of the professional criticism / praise of the systems in place in the US, or learning theory, or theory of achievement, so on & so forth.

They talk to talk, since they are convinced of their own genius. This is "expressing yourself" at its worst.

Commentors are unfamiliar with basic rhetorical principles - calling certain things 'ad hominem' when they are genuinely relevant observations that have to do with the person, claiming that facts are pure and all that must be considered, falling prey to obvious bids for trolldom (time_management), etc., etc.

All of the above has, in my opinion, increased a lot in the past year & even last 6 mos. (Not to mention the shifting of content towards more & more regurgitated 'productivity porn,' tired old pablum that you could get from any 20-year-old Anthony Robbins tape or 60-year-old Peale book, or even older classical advice manuals.)

The alternative is that I'm suddenly a much deeper thinker than I was, and I don't think that's the case.

Please accept my apologies - almost 2 years in Japan has put an end to my capacity for writing proper English. I did intend to say that people seemed to be as intelligent (or not) as they were when I had started reading this site.

The education piece, as you mention, is (at most) a once-a-week ego-stroking event. It has become a pattern by now, with people more interested in defending themselves than "reaching the truth". I'm going to lose Karma for this, but how does that differ from the long tradition of promoting a programming language as the "be all end all" when the rationalist position is that each language has benefits and disadvantages? I submit that there hasn't been much of a change.

As for the lack of rhetorical skills, I cannot argue either way - I don't recall having read an article where someone accused someone else of making an ad-hominem attack (my own choice of stories differs from your own I suppose)

I'll agree with you on the "productivity porn" though. Much like some local tech events (like Tokyo 2.0), there does seem to be an excess of stories where people talk about "getting things done", without necessarily the evidence of anything actually being done.

Thanks for clarifying, and I hope you weren't offended at my original message.

Oh, no, I'm not offended. I was just refuting what you said because I disagree. No worries at all.

You're right, the language stuff is almost exactly the same thing, except (in theory) HN people know a lot about programming languages.

The education stuff, and the economic stuff, and (god forbid) the design stuff, people know practically nothing about, and rarely bother to educate themselves. People just want a forum for venting their personal opinions and promulgating their pre-existing worldviews.

(In my opinion, true hackers -- the technical type, and every other type -- have fluid worldviews and don't invest much in defending their own egos in the face of conflict.)

HN does not promote moderation or rationality (e.g. "everyone should use the tools that make them most effective and not argue about it"). No popularity contest can.

It devolves into a place where people come to be reassured that they are, in fact, great, and the things that they are weak at are unimportant, and the things they are strong at are the most important things in the world. Metacognition disappears.

Cycle:

Founders: This place sucks! Let's start a new place with only the best.

First Wave: This place is so much better! I can breathe free with like minds! Yay! Let's tell people about it.

Second Wave: Dude this is like better than that other place. My Ruby linkbait isn't so lost in the news.

Third Wave: RON PAUL!!

All communities like this decay this way without very, very careful tending... and to do that careful tending, one must have an excellent understanding of social dynamics, human nature, and social skills in general.

Thus all developer-centric news sites are doomed! ;)

All we should really be asking for is that the site that a link is to is clearly labelled. Most Coding Horror links are marked as such, as are TC links. Perhaps this could be built into HN so that when people forget to put it in it will still be indicated.

But is it really such a big deal, don't click on the TC links and if you end up on TC just use the back arrow. Nothing too difficult is it?

Submariners, payperpost, fud, propaganda and astroturfing are plaguing HN lately, even if people don't want to acknowledge that obvious fact.

They are like a disease, we better find a cure before it is too late.

Can you give me some examples?
We shouldn't be biased. Techcrunch links are sometimes crap, sometimes good. So completely banning wouldn't do any good.

Let's solve it the HN way. Just don't up vote what you don't like. OK, you say, "I don't, but they get votes somehow". That, my friend, is _probably_ because community is polluted.

What would stop ten or twenty shills from an "interested party" to upvote all their stories to get to the front page?

One you detect that pattern you should ban them to avoid further spreading of bad behavior.

And I am not talking about TC only...

If so it's been polluted from the beginning, because TC articles have always gotten votes here.

http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=81

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So you say their referencing Twitter too much is justification for banning their content ... then you use a Twitter post to back up another one of your points? That's funny.