←back to thread

The man who killed Google Search?

(www.wheresyoured.at)
1884 points elorant | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.214s | source
Show context
dang ◴[] No.40135403[source]
Anybody have a better title? 'Better' here means (1) less baity; (2) more accurate and neutral; and (3) preferably a representative phrase from the article itself.

"The man who killed Google Search" is too baity. See the 'unless' in https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html: "Please use the original title, unless it is misleading or linkbait"

Edit (since there are objections): I'm not taking a position for or against the article; I haven't read it. This is just bog-standard HN moderation regarding titles. I skimmed the article looking for a representative phrase and couldn't find one on first pass. That is rather unusual and when it happens I sometimes ask the community for help.

Edit 2: since there's no consensus on this I'm just going to reify that fact via the trailing-question-mark trick and call it a day.

replies(9): >>40135446 #>>40135562 #>>40135640 #>>40136157 #>>40136565 #>>40137747 #>>40137760 #>>40139868 #>>40141944 #
taco_emoji ◴[] No.40135562[source]
"Linkbait" implies it's hyperbole, but I would argue that the headline is a perfect description of the argument being made here.
replies(1): >>40135839 #
dang ◴[] No.40135839[source]
Linkbait is about using tricks to grab attention rather than providing neutral information. Hyperbole is only one way to do that.

In this case "The man who" is a linkbait trope and "killed" is a sensational attention-grabby word. Composing them into "the man who killed" is linkbait.

replies(2): >>40136360 #>>40138587 #
1. Takennickname ◴[] No.40136360[source]
"Prabhakar made search bad"