I’m not entirely clear on the purpose of the rule. It makes sense to not just increase the redundancy of anything people have said in other threads that have already got a lot of attention, but I’m sure there’s plenty of interesting stuff buried deep in comment threads that haven’t got much light and might be worth sharing. Conversely, there will be some quotes here from outside LW/OB that a high proportion of readers have seen already.
So it’s definitely something that made sense when the LW/OB community was smaller and there wasn’t much good stuff that people weren’t seeing anyway, but perhaps it’s time to relax the rule a little bit, replace it with the substance.
I believe the purpose was to bring material to LW from outside rather than quoting each other (and especially, quoting Eliezer), to avoid an echo chamber effect. There was once an experimental LW Quotes Thread, but the experiment has not been repeated.
I don’t have a strong view about whether LW regulars posting on other LW regulars’ blogs should be excluded from the quotes threads, but I incline against the practice. It was a good quote though.
I can’t comment on the size (so LW is growing?), but I have a tingling memory that long time ago (several years back) people did post LW quotes. Since LW doesn’t exist that long I suppose it was the case in its inception.
I can’t say for sure, but actually Eugine’s post seems to suggest that as well; otherwise it wouldn’t have been “creeping into”.
Either way, should be easy to check. I do, too, think it is worthwhile to put LW quotes. I remember (I do!) reading those and being led to read the original articles whence they came.
Am I the only one who finds it annoying how the “do not quote LW rule” has been creeping into ever broader interpretations?
Hmm. It’s an interesting point.
I’m not entirely clear on the purpose of the rule. It makes sense to not just increase the redundancy of anything people have said in other threads that have already got a lot of attention, but I’m sure there’s plenty of interesting stuff buried deep in comment threads that haven’t got much light and might be worth sharing. Conversely, there will be some quotes here from outside LW/OB that a high proportion of readers have seen already.
So it’s definitely something that made sense when the LW/OB community was smaller and there wasn’t much good stuff that people weren’t seeing anyway, but perhaps it’s time to relax the rule a little bit, replace it with the substance.
I believe the purpose was to bring material to LW from outside rather than quoting each other (and especially, quoting Eliezer), to avoid an echo chamber effect. There was once an experimental LW Quotes Thread, but the experiment has not been repeated.
I don’t have a strong view about whether LW regulars posting on other LW regulars’ blogs should be excluded from the quotes threads, but I incline against the practice. It was a good quote though.
Which side do you incline against?
Against having such quotes.
I can’t comment on the size (so LW is growing?), but I have a tingling memory that long time ago (several years back) people did post LW quotes. Since LW doesn’t exist that long I suppose it was the case in its inception. I can’t say for sure, but actually Eugine’s post seems to suggest that as well; otherwise it wouldn’t have been “creeping into”. Either way, should be easy to check. I do, too, think it is worthwhile to put LW quotes. I remember (I do!) reading those and being led to read the original articles whence they came.
I don’t think LW/OB quotes were ever allowed, but MoR quotes used to be.
I think we may have cracked down on Hanson quotes too.
There was a separate thread for that for a while.