Item Two: False assumption. Newbies aren’t in fact obliged to read the entire sequences before commenting. They can comment about things like their personal experiences, their areas of instrumental expertise, and matters of opinion. They can request citations for statistics, correct many types of factual errors, issue praise, introduce themselves, make jokes, and talk about locally popular fiction and fanfiction. Any of these types of comments can be valuable, can garner upvotes, and does not need to be suppressed.
The type of newbie comment that is problematic is uncommon compared to the unproblematic newbie comment types. When problematic newbies say annoying things that really would be solved by their reading the sequences, they come in one of two types: one, they only needed a link to the correct sequence, and will promptly stop making problematic comments when so linked. These are fairly uncommon; LW has a lot of obvious conceptual house rules, and most newbies seem to stay out of the deep stuff on their own. The second type is a borderline troll or worse, and while such trolls might be kept out of part of the community by the puzzle you describe if you could control solution leak, downvoting and (in a pinch) banning also do the trick without filtering out commenters who, like me, have no interest in solving silly puzzles you make up.
Item three suffers a similar assumption.
Four: Assumes that people make the same inferential steps from concept to concept. I think this is false. Also assumes that people interested enough in LW to try to comment are the “general population”; I think this is also false.
Five: Of course the idea is neat. But that doesn’t mean it is a prudent idea, or that it should be imposed on everyone. As a quick-and-dirty test, I would have abandoned the site on Stumblingupon it if this sort of system was in place (and solutions weren’t leaked). Assuming for the sake of argument that I’m a valuable commenter, we should tread carefully when considering the introduction of filters that would have driven me away.
Two: I had offered theselinks in the anticipation that they would be taken as sufficient evidence that newbies are in fact obliged to read the entire sequences before commenting, and it was from there that I derived my beliefs that there was a problem that needed solving. Since you’re a mod, it seems reasonable that you would have strong first-hand knowledge of the balance of good and bad comments; but on the other hand those links contain even more tightly first-hand assertions from newbies that something suboptimal is going on. I’m not sure what to believe at this point, which means it’s probably not a good thing that my brain is still trying to propose solutions.
Three: I don’t have real evidence for this one; I had imagined that newbies are turned off by an apparent social pressure to have read the sequences, so if Two is out and you say it doesn’t work like that then this is likely wrong.
Four: I’d assumed, roughly, one inferential step per post. It’s already discretized, posts have globally-unique names (at worst, we can use the URL), and the dependency graph is explicit. And even if there are in fact several inferential steps for a given person in a given post, it’s a reasonable amount of reading to ask someone to absorb one post.
LW-baseline being higher than humanity-baseline just means we don’t need as many tiers.
Five through Seven: I said before I shouldn’t still be proposing solutions, but...
It bugs me that the dependency pointers are only listed in one direction. I want to be able to start at the beginning of the Sequences and chase pointers to the end. And, wherever I am in the Sequences, it would be nice to have a discussion area for that stage, where I can quickly find questions from other people who might have had the same questions I have. (The comments don’t really work for this—commenting on a blog post from 2007 or something always feels like thread necromancy.)
And, as long as we’re setting up a big separate additional optional system for reading through, we might as well structure it as a conspiracy rather than a university, assuming the Do Not Want problem discussed under Five can be solved. (Conspiracies are fun, right?)
The first tier, for people who are reading the dependencyless posts, would of course be publicly accessible. And people who just fundamentally DNW can just continue using the regular LW that currently exists.
And I’m rationalizing aren’t I. I have two separate desires: I want a neat fun conspiracy with fearsome rituals, and I want to chase pointers from bottom to top with individual discussion areas. I have no particular reason to believe that either of these two things would benefit from being combined with the other.
I had offered these links in the anticipation that they would be taken as sufficient evidence that newbies are in fact obliged to read the entire sequences before commenting
I think you’re using “obliged” to mean encouraged/pushed, and Alicorn is using it to mean required-before-being useful. The former is accurate, but to a variable degree; the latter, as she demonstrated, is not.
I had imagined that newbies are turned off by an apparent social pressure to have read the sequences
Yes. and being restricted to a newbie-only (i.e. devoid of useful content!) area until we could prove we had done so would not be less of a turnoff. :P
Item Two: False assumption. Newbies aren’t in fact obliged to read the entire sequences before commenting. They can comment about things like their personal experiences, their areas of instrumental expertise, and matters of opinion. They can request citations for statistics, correct many types of factual errors, issue praise, introduce themselves, make jokes, and talk about locally popular fiction and fanfiction. Any of these types of comments can be valuable, can garner upvotes, and does not need to be suppressed.
The type of newbie comment that is problematic is uncommon compared to the unproblematic newbie comment types. When problematic newbies say annoying things that really would be solved by their reading the sequences, they come in one of two types: one, they only needed a link to the correct sequence, and will promptly stop making problematic comments when so linked. These are fairly uncommon; LW has a lot of obvious conceptual house rules, and most newbies seem to stay out of the deep stuff on their own. The second type is a borderline troll or worse, and while such trolls might be kept out of part of the community by the puzzle you describe if you could control solution leak, downvoting and (in a pinch) banning also do the trick without filtering out commenters who, like me, have no interest in solving silly puzzles you make up.
Item three suffers a similar assumption.
Four: Assumes that people make the same inferential steps from concept to concept. I think this is false. Also assumes that people interested enough in LW to try to comment are the “general population”; I think this is also false.
Five: Of course the idea is neat. But that doesn’t mean it is a prudent idea, or that it should be imposed on everyone. As a quick-and-dirty test, I would have abandoned the site on Stumblingupon it if this sort of system was in place (and solutions weren’t leaked). Assuming for the sake of argument that I’m a valuable commenter, we should tread carefully when considering the introduction of filters that would have driven me away.
Six and seven suffer similar problems.
Two: I had offered these links in the anticipation that they would be taken as sufficient evidence that newbies are in fact obliged to read the entire sequences before commenting, and it was from there that I derived my beliefs that there was a problem that needed solving. Since you’re a mod, it seems reasonable that you would have strong first-hand knowledge of the balance of good and bad comments; but on the other hand those links contain even more tightly first-hand assertions from newbies that something suboptimal is going on. I’m not sure what to believe at this point, which means it’s probably not a good thing that my brain is still trying to propose solutions.
Three: I don’t have real evidence for this one; I had imagined that newbies are turned off by an apparent social pressure to have read the sequences, so if Two is out and you say it doesn’t work like that then this is likely wrong.
Four: I’d assumed, roughly, one inferential step per post. It’s already discretized, posts have globally-unique names (at worst, we can use the URL), and the dependency graph is explicit. And even if there are in fact several inferential steps for a given person in a given post, it’s a reasonable amount of reading to ask someone to absorb one post.
LW-baseline being higher than humanity-baseline just means we don’t need as many tiers.
Five through Seven: I said before I shouldn’t still be proposing solutions, but...
It bugs me that the dependency pointers are only listed in one direction. I want to be able to start at the beginning of the Sequences and chase pointers to the end. And, wherever I am in the Sequences, it would be nice to have a discussion area for that stage, where I can quickly find questions from other people who might have had the same questions I have. (The comments don’t really work for this—commenting on a blog post from 2007 or something always feels like thread necromancy.)
And, as long as we’re setting up a big separate additional optional system for reading through, we might as well structure it as a conspiracy rather than a university, assuming the Do Not Want problem discussed under Five can be solved. (Conspiracies are fun, right?)
The first tier, for people who are reading the dependencyless posts, would of course be publicly accessible. And people who just fundamentally DNW can just continue using the regular LW that currently exists.
And I’m rationalizing aren’t I. I have two separate desires: I want a neat fun conspiracy with fearsome rituals, and I want to chase pointers from bottom to top with individual discussion areas. I have no particular reason to believe that either of these two things would benefit from being combined with the other.
I think you’re using “obliged” to mean encouraged/pushed, and Alicorn is using it to mean required-before-being useful. The former is accurate, but to a variable degree; the latter, as she demonstrated, is not.
Yes. and being restricted to a newbie-only (i.e. devoid of useful content!) area until we could prove we had done so would not be less of a turnoff. :P
I’ve since come to think of the tiered discussions as being in addition to what currently exists, rather than instead of it.
But, uh,
yeah, that’s a good point.