I remember there being a bunch of websites dedicated to doing this, though I am not using any of them. AllSides is I think the example that I have been referred to most often.
Speaking about things that I do often do:
On Wikipedia articles I often read the talk pages in order to get a sense of what viewpoints I might be missing by just reading the article
In terms of general diversity of view perspective, I think the following ordering in terms of media sources roughly holds (starting with the most diverse):
Online Forums/Reddit/LessWrong (mostly because healthy comment sections tend to cover a lot of ideological ground)
Facebook discussions among my friends
Textbooks (there is a particular genre of handbook-like/overview-based textbooks that tend to do a good job of summarizing many viewpoints in a field)
Private online blogs
Educational Youtube channels
News articles
For politics and culture-war related stuff, there is r/theMotte, which I have heard has an exceptional amount of viewpoint diversity compared to most other forums
I know that some people successfully use Twitter for this, but I don’t use Twitter, so no idea
In AI Alignment we luckily have the AI Alignment Newsletter, which seems to cover a lot of the things happening around AI-Alignment
In AI Alignment we luckily have the AI Alignment Newsletter, which seems to cover basically everything happening in the field
Depends on what you call “the field”: there’s a fair number of judgment calls on my part, and the summaries are definitely biased towards things I can understand quickly. (For example, many short LW posts about AI alignment don’t make it into the newsletter.)
I remember there being a bunch of websites dedicated to doing this, though I am not using any of them. AllSides is I think the example that I have been referred to most often.
Speaking about things that I do often do:
On Wikipedia articles I often read the talk pages in order to get a sense of what viewpoints I might be missing by just reading the article
In terms of general diversity of view perspective, I think the following ordering in terms of media sources roughly holds (starting with the most diverse):
Online Forums/Reddit/LessWrong (mostly because healthy comment sections tend to cover a lot of ideological ground)
Facebook discussions among my friends
Textbooks (there is a particular genre of handbook-like/overview-based textbooks that tend to do a good job of summarizing many viewpoints in a field)
Private online blogs
Educational Youtube channels
News articles
For politics and culture-war related stuff, there is r/theMotte, which I have heard has an exceptional amount of viewpoint diversity compared to most other forums
I know that some people successfully use Twitter for this, but I don’t use Twitter, so no idea
In AI Alignment we luckily have the AI Alignment Newsletter, which seems to cover a lot of the things happening around AI-Alignment
Depends on what you call “the field”: there’s a fair number of judgment calls on my part, and the summaries are definitely biased towards things I can understand quickly. (For example, many short LW posts about AI alignment don’t make it into the newsletter.)
Yeah, agree. Edited to clarify a bit.