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Hacker News Guidelines

(news.ycombinator.com)
446 points tonmoy | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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naillo ◴[] No.37251836[source]
The only one I subtly disagree with is "comments should be substantive". What it discourages I think is comments like "thanks" or other really 'unsubstantive' comments. It's true that maybe it adds noise, and in many cases are maybe supposed to be inferred without explicitly saying. But I think discouraging this slightly leans behaviour towards snark vs not. (If you see comments like "thanks" you're less likely to be snarky than if you see 'substantive' but maybe too harsh critiques in the comments that appear because "cool project!" isn't allowed.)

Personally I like to make it a point to break this rule from time to time to reduce this pattern.

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dang ◴[] No.37252568[source]
SushiHippie already said it (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37252326), but pg made this point way back in https://news.ycombinator.com/newswelcome.html (2009):

Empty comments can be ok if they're positive. There's nothing wrong with submitting a comment saying just "Thanks." What we especially discourage are comments that are empty and negative—comments that are mere name-calling.

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EA-3167 ◴[] No.37252760[source]
Whole subs on Reddit are essentially rendered worthless because the comments are all low-effort, meme responses. This is one of the only places I've been online where the discussion of Prigozhin's death wasn't just 500+ "Fell out of a window" comments.

THANK YOU

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lostlogin ◴[] No.37256538[source]
> Whole subs on Reddit are essentially rendered worthless because the comments are all low-effort

This might be a feature - some events are ripe for ridicule and jokes, and Reddit having has areas where this is completely the norm provides a forum.

But when you want to know what chainsaw to buy, how to make a specific ESP chip work or some other random thing, Reddit also provides.

You have to avoid getting sucked into its cesspits.

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1. EA-3167 ◴[] No.37256634[source]
You're right about that, it's honestly unfair for me to refer to Reddit as though it's a monolith. r/AskHistory is as good as it's ever been, r/WhatsThisBug is always fun, and lots of little niche subs are just vibrant communities.

Unfortunately when it comes to the major news subs, the big issue isn't polarizing politics, it's just people using the headline to spout memes.