A Liar Standing Next to a Hole in the Ground: Gold Mining in Arizona(outsideonline.com) |
A Liar Standing Next to a Hole in the Ground: Gold Mining in Arizona(outsideonline.com) |
I read it after yesterday's link. I concluded that I really don't understand the urge to prospect for gold, at least not in the secret mines, ancient tales, and schlepping ore by pack and pack animal sort of way.
No, that was us. We asked the submitter to repost it as part of an ongoing experiment we're running to give good stories multiple chances at the front page. I wrote about this here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8790134.
Rhetorically speaking, how do I distinguish between someone who was asked to re-post, and someone who is making multiple submissions for, say, self-promotional reason? This case didn't look like self-promotion, though others with a sparser posting history might. I tend to flag the more egregious self-promoters.
After reading your comments, I'll be more generous about upvoting /newest.
I'd like to emphasize that our long-term intention is to have the community manage all of this.
For the time being, you have to tell that by looking at the articles and the account's submission history. It's usually pretty easy to spot self-promotion. Keep in mind, though, that self-promotion per se isn't against the spirit of the site; uninteresting content is.
Also, we modified the FAQ to make it clear that when a story hasn't had much attention yet, a small number of reposts is ok. The point of all of this is try to mitigate the weaknesses of /newest as a mechanism for recognizing good stories.
I can imagine you need to defend against rings of people submitting the same spam story over time, but maybe if a few established users are submitting a story, its rank could be raised more than the karma/time ratio alone would indicate.
You can also have stories with more text behind them as an indicator of quality. While long stories could be gamed, I think it's a decently helpful metric of quality as most spammers are lazy enough not to write a long article. not a perfect metric but something to consider.
Not trying to be crass, but why would we care? I upvote interesting content, and ignore uninteresting content.
Is there a reason that we should be concerned whether the submitter is benefitting in some way from his submission?
There are 232 links to questions in travel.stackexchange . Over 90% of them have an affiliation tracker id of /101 , although coming from different HN accounts. The questions include "Does condition 8115 mean you can't check your work email while travelling?" and "Can travel agents match automated ITA Travel Matrix prices?". These are only slightly less off topic than a carpet cleaning service advertisement.
For a while it seemed like I was seeing those links every day, to the point of annoyance. Just reading the travel-related title often meant that I knew that the topic would be uninteresting, and with the /101 at the end of the URL. My interpretation was that the operator of the account was more interested in the reputation gain on stackexchange rather than posting interesting links, and would switch accounts in order to get around HN flags.
There was another account a few years back which linked to an inane math trivia blog, perhaps several times per day. (I can't find examples now, but they were like "What's interesting about the number 120?") It wasn't really appropriate for HN, and not something I wanted to wade through every day. I assumed it was either to drive traffic, or a sort of way to spread a parent's love, metaphorically speaking.
For posts like that I usually point out in the comments that the topic isn't really that interesting, before bringing in the flag. I don't recall any responses, which leads me to think it's more to drive traffic than to find out what others might find interesting.
If submissions aren't flagged, and there are no mechanism put into place to remove off-topic or almost-off-topic posts, then there will be a lot more uninteresting content to ignore, like Photoshop Experts For Hire: Cheap!
Do you want that?