I don’t think that’s what they were doing. The commenters (the NY Times commenters, btw, not the Ycombinator commenters) seem to genuinely believe that it is only bad and no good.
“It might be the time to download “1984” from your Scribd or Oyster subscription service. I’m sure they have it.”
“Surrendering your thoughts: A Haiku
Creepy. Nasty. Yuk.
A good way to hasten the
Singularity ”
“I’m going to find out the top 50 favorite words and then write a book using only those 50 words. Who cares about creativity? It’s about the money, kids.”
I don’t think these comments come out of a desire to just present the other side fairly. I think that this is just, straightforwardly, what they think about the concept of studying reader preferences.
I don’t think that’s what they were doing. The commenters (the NY Times commenters, btw, not the Ycombinator commenters) seem to genuinely believe that it is only bad and no good.
“It might be the time to download “1984” from your Scribd or Oyster subscription service. I’m sure they have it.”
“Surrendering your thoughts: A Haiku
Creepy. Nasty. Yuk. A good way to hasten the Singularity ”
“I’m going to find out the top 50 favorite words and then write a book using only those 50 words. Who cares about creativity? It’s about the money, kids.”
I don’t think these comments come out of a desire to just present the other side fairly. I think that this is just, straightforwardly, what they think about the concept of studying reader preferences.