Of course, comment quality is an input into your overall feedback. But not the only input, and importantly not the main one, I think. (By “comment” here I’m thinking of “random internet strangers saying things about your article, eg here on Lesswrong.”)
There are so many other sources of feedback, including:
how you yourself judge the article
feedback from people you trust
reshares, link backs, quotes of the article
up votes, views
Which I think should combine for a holistic evaluation of how well your particular article was received. Comments may be one of the easier metrics, but leaning on it too heavily runs afoul of “drunk looking under streetlight for keys”
Of course, comment quality is an input into your overall feedback. But not the only input, and importantly not the main one, I think. (By “comment” here I’m thinking of “random internet strangers saying things about your article, eg here on Lesswrong.”)
There are so many other sources of feedback, including:
how you yourself judge the article
feedback from people you trust
reshares, link backs, quotes of the article
up votes, views
Which I think should combine for a holistic evaluation of how well your particular article was received. Comments may be one of the easier metrics, but leaning on it too heavily runs afoul of “drunk looking under streetlight for keys”