Tell HN: HN is not immune to manipulation
It started innocently. There was (is) a submission from phys.org about birds and windmills which caught my attention. Ironically, it was the odd article which didn't provide links to the actual research or paper it mentioned which caught my eye.
Then in the comments, I saw a strange post from an HN reader (who was also the submitter) which merely pasted an intro paragraph from the phys.org page. The comment and quote added nothing other than a visible "1 comment" to the post.
Looking at the submissions from this user, I saw dozens of submissions each day for the last several days. Many had a particular slant related to a particular ongoing war.
Moderator dang is one person. Is there any way we can keep HN from becoming drowned in garbage? > Is there any way we can keep HN from becoming drowned in garbage? Do as the guidelines recommend: > Please don't post insinuations about astroturfing, shilling, bots, brigading, foreign agents and the like. It degrades discussion and is usually mistaken. If you're worried about abuse, email hn@ycombinator.com and we'll look at the data. > Is there any way we can keep HN from becoming drowned in garbage? You make a good point - that we should watch out for manipulation everywhere on the internet - but then you undermine it by ending with an unfounded hyperbolic statement. You only provided one example user out of thousands (millions?) of HN users, how do you get from there to "drowning in garbage"? Seems to me the mods and community here are doing a pretty good job already. The mentioned user is always on the front page, and I never hesitate to flag all of their non-tech/startup links, which is probably 90 percent of their submissions. They post nearly once per hour. This user and three others are the reason I posted a similar recent rant about serial off-topic posting: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30907198 I can call out usernames if you really insist, but that's a bit rude when some of them are on https://news.ycombinator.com/leaders I intentionally did not identify the poster. But if you look at recent submissions regarding birds and phys.org, you'll find them. As for hyperbole, I think it's a valid concern. If that user is allowed to operate freely, (and assuming that user is being paid or is a bot), then we can expect many more like them to appear. Then indeed HN will be drowned in garbage submissions. Unless the mods have analytics which identify odd patterns of behavior, they will depend on users to flag things. And if only a few users flag something, then most other users won't see it. Thus, it only gets "some" flags. It seems more reasonable to judge a user by the volume of posts and submissions over time. Who legitmately has time or motivation to submit 10+ things per day? Or to do that several days in a short period? Even if that is a real human choosing to promote content, does that not suggest some behavior which is likely to be detrimental to HN as a gathering place? Flag and move on. That's the problem though... the post I saw wasn't flag-worthy. It was a bit poor quality in my opinion, but it wasn't objectionable. What was obvious to me was the frequency of submissions of the account, and additionally nature of the topics. Simplistically, I would question the need for any HN user to submit more than one or two entries per day. People who submit 10+ are probably suspect. Maybe there needs to be a way to flag a user if they are negatively contributing to HN. There is. There is banning and shadowbanning, which includes mechanisms where whatever stories someone posts are "dead" on arrival. HN has robust mechanisms against spam. Re "manipulation" I'd think one person's manipulation is another person's posting interesting stories, but as was said, if someone's submissions get flagged enough, it will get attention and their posts will be killed if deemed spam. Overall I think it's more common just to see posts that people disagree with or read into versus actual "manipulation". Also, the concept of manipulation is very insulting to the readership. Maybe it's sometimes warranted, but on HN of all places, I think people can debate, judge, and flag on their own if they think something is being manipulative. The suspicion of manipulation is based on years of evidence of "troll farms" and other social media campaigns. To think that HN is immune is naive. If arguably the smartest tech group on the internet cannot devise a defense, then we're more doomed than I thought. After all, at the opposite end of the spectrum we have "AI" at Google and other companies banning users based on incomprehensible algorithms. Surely there's a path between the extremes. Consider for a moment how little it would cost to pay people to post on HN. Other HN readers don't even need to see it; it just needs to get indexed by search engines. That adds the weight of HN to the content which it is linking to as far as the search engines are concerned. They probably aren't measuring HN reader votes. So the question is, should we allow HN to be used as a lever to promote anything that a financially-backed group wants to promote? Or can we devise ways to reduce or eliminate this? Report the bots/spammers to dang and let them deal with it IFF it goes against the guidelines (shadowban, etc). The kind of thought policing you're proposing will never fly here. Did you bother to look at the poster's submissions? It's not "thought policing". It is intent-awareness. > Moderator dang is one person He's the public voice of a team. Ok. Even so, I think there could be some automation to at least hold submissions for review based on patterns. Perhaps I'm lazy, but I can't imagine submitting 10+ links per day. That seems like a bit of an outlier which could be identified programmatically.