Note: LessWrong has high/specific standards for first posts
We think of LessWrong as somewhere in between a forum and a university or academic journal. Your first post is a bit like an application to said university. Established users can write on a variety of topics, but new users should focus on communicating clear, succinct models/evidence/arguments that are relevant to LessWrong. (We recommend avoiding fiction or poetic posts until you’ve gotten some upvoted object-level posts)
Write a clear introduction. Your first couple paragraphs should make it obvious what the main point of your post is, and ideally gesture at the strongest argument for that point. Explain why your post is relevant to the LessWrong audience.
Address existing counterarguments (if applicable). We try to avoid rehashing debates that have been covered significantly. If your post seems to be ignoring important arguments that have already been made on a topic, mods may ask you to do more background reading.
AI content is held to a particularly high standard. There’s a large wave of AI content. Ideally, we’d give a lot of feedback and guidance to each individual. Unfortunately we don’t have bandwidth to do that. We’re working on some posts to give people a better sense of how to get started. Meanwhile in some cases we may ask you to do some more background reading or comment in the AI Questions Open Thread.
You can read more advice about how to make a good first post in the new user’s guide.
If I was a new user reading “Your first post is a bit like an application,” I would delay making a first post longer than would be optimal: I would spend too much time revising my first post or even discard several possibilities until I had a post idea I was ~sure was good.
A bad-thing-to-avoid is that the people who are most scrupulous about reading messages like this, who (maybe) are also more likely to have written fine posts in the first place, end up overly anxious about it and delaying longer unnecessarily.
Suboptimal for what, though? If you audition for a place in an orchestra and you’re accepted, does that make the audition a suboptimal waste of time? If an aspiring musician lacks the confidence to apply, that is their problem, not the orchestra’s.
Have you scaled up the moderation accordingly? I have noticed fewer comments that are on the level of what gets posted on r/slatestarcodex these days but I’m not sure if it’s just a selection effect.
For the past couple weeks we’ve been checking each new comment and rejecting ones we think fail the criteria in the comment warning. (This ends up being something like 9 comments a day. For comparison, there’s like 2-3 comments from newish users each day that actually seem to meet the bar)
We’ll hopefully have the “rejected” section of the site up soon so that people can evaluate whether they think we’re making reasonable calls here.
(To be clear, when I say “not reduced the number of posts”, I mean “reduced the number of people submitting posts”, not “posts that get accepted.” We’ve also been rejecting a few new posts a day)
Note: LessWrong has high/specific standards for first posts
We think of LessWrong as somewhere in between a forum and a university or academic journal. Your first post is a bit like an application to said university. Established users can write on a variety of topics, but new users should focus on communicating clear, succinct models/evidence/arguments that are relevant to LessWrong. (We recommend avoiding fiction or poetic posts until you’ve gotten some upvoted object-level posts)
Understand rationality fundamentals. Try to reason probabilistically, get curious about where you might be wrong, avoid arguing over definitions, etc. Moderators may reject content that seems to be making reasoning mistakes covered in The Sequences.
Write a clear introduction. Your first couple paragraphs should make it obvious what the main point of your post is, and ideally gesture at the strongest argument for that point. Explain why your post is relevant to the LessWrong audience.
Address existing counterarguments (if applicable). We try to avoid rehashing debates that have been covered significantly. If your post seems to be ignoring important arguments that have already been made on a topic, mods may ask you to do more background reading.
AI content is held to a particularly high standard. There’s a large wave of AI content. Ideally, we’d give a lot of feedback and guidance to each individual. Unfortunately we don’t have bandwidth to do that. We’re working on some posts to give people a better sense of how to get started. Meanwhile in some cases we may ask you to do some more background reading or comment in the AI Questions Open Thread.
You can read more advice about how to make a good first post in the new user’s guide.
If I was a new user reading “Your first post is a bit like an application,” I would delay making a first post longer than would be optimal: I would spend too much time revising my first post or even discard several possibilities until I had a post idea I was ~sure was good.
Um, hypothetically working as intended?
A bad-thing-to-avoid is that the people who are most scrupulous about reading messages like this, who (maybe) are also more likely to have written fine posts in the first place, end up overly anxious about it and delaying longer unnecessarily.
Um, no; see “longer than would be optimal.”
Suboptimal for what, though? If you audition for a place in an orchestra and you’re accepted, does that make the audition a suboptimal waste of time? If an aspiring musician lacks the confidence to apply, that is their problem, not the orchestra’s.
I am worried that, although also it’s been up for a week and not obviously reduced the number of posts.
Have you scaled up the moderation accordingly? I have noticed fewer comments that are on the level of what gets posted on r/slatestarcodex these days but I’m not sure if it’s just a selection effect.
For the past couple weeks we’ve been checking each new comment and rejecting ones we think fail the criteria in the comment warning. (This ends up being something like 9 comments a day. For comparison, there’s like 2-3 comments from newish users each day that actually seem to meet the bar)
We’ll hopefully have the “rejected” section of the site up soon so that people can evaluate whether they think we’re making reasonable calls here.
(To be clear, when I say “not reduced the number of posts”, I mean “reduced the number of people submitting posts”, not “posts that get accepted.” We’ve also been rejecting a few new posts a day)
It would be nice to have some examples of firsts that were short and met the bar.