Hacker News is actively censoring links to Arrington story. (blog.mattlanger.com) |
Hacker News is actively censoring links to Arrington story. (blog.mattlanger.com) |
On my part, I think that most news about Michael Arrington is probably relevant to this community, but I don't count a story about someone's personal life as "news" until it comes from a reliable source. (After all, even Wikipedia tries to maintain this standard for biographical statements about living persons.) Having just searched Google News, I haven't seen any uptake of any reporting about Arrington in professionally edited news sources. If that kind of story is developed, it MIGHT be worth discussing here. (Meanwhile, we have plenty of other things to discuss here.)
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5492145
Most controversies related to personal conflicts and allegations are usually flagged, not just in this particular case (many of the Adria Richards-related submissions, for example). I wouldn't chalk this up to a conspiracy to protect Arrington or being anti-Gawker as much as HN's editorial stance on these topics in general.
Donglegate was still lousy for HN. Most threads had little useful discussion, a lot of entrenched opinion, and a lot of heat. ("shallowly, but intensely, interesting").
This? This is nothing useful.
Anyway, I don't know what the best mix of discretion and freedom is...but HN would lose some of its allure if its policy was: "Only allow links that are explicitly technical/entrepreneurial in nature" Because how many times do hackers need to learn that success in life and business is sometimes (or, rather, often) not based just on technical merit?
Absent of her going to the cops, I think allowing allegations of this nature to surface on HN set a poor precedent when unaccompanied by appropriate legal complaint.
It was autodead. I still think that my story was interesting, at that there were a few threads about "new" "aliens" were "found" in meteorites. But whatever, I didn't want to start a war for this.
It was quite technical and not about some internet celebrity. I suspect that gawker.com is banned.
https://www.hnsearch.com/search#request/submissions&q=io...
And Kotaku is still allowed as well: it was the top story (regarding LucasArts shutdown) a couple days ago:
Gawker.com and Deadspin are banned from HN? I don't mind that at all.
But I'm curious if HN really shows different stories when logged in and logged out, which is what this particular post is alleging. I've never noticed that happen, but maybe I just didn't notice.
Some people are hellbanned. They post a link. They can see the link. They log out. They cannot see any of their posts. That's not because that URL is banned, but because none of their posts are visible unless a logged in user has 'showdead' turned on in their profile.
why?
i believe paul graham and any moderators know full well the damaging effects censorship has on a community. why do some of you guys or gals constantly think there is some conspiracy?
It's quite obviously happening, and pg & co have regularly confirmed it. HN is heavily moderated, and the moderation is not particularly transparent.
You can argue that it's a good thing and it keeps HN nice and clean, but denying it is... kind of scary really.