ML is like a genie in that it is very good at optimizing exactly what you tell it to, and so you need to think long and hard about what you're telling it to optimize, because it might turn out to be bad proxy for what you really wanted.
My timeline would be so much healthier if Twitter put me in charge of who shows up in it.
After Google killed Reader I was forced to follow all the people who used to blog to keep up with their professional work. But especially in the last 3 years Twitter feeds have all come with a large side order of political hot takes that I have zero interest in sitting through.
To counteract this I have an extensive word blocklist and turn off retweets on many people so my Twitter can remain about the work of interesting people in my industry and not just an open sewer of politics.
Twitters insistence to show me posts that people I follow liked or engaged highly with bypasses all this.
Same here. Recently discovered the RSS reader Cappuccino (thanks HN) and so far it seems to fix the problem. It even syncs unread posts between Mac and iPad.
If Twitter ever moves to a fully algorithmic timeline like Instagram (has annoying done), it will shrivel up and die. The linear timeline of Twitter is what makes Twitter....Twitter. I've noticed a lot lately that more and more I see tweets out of order because of the algorithms. I believe you can turn that off, but sometimes those are useful...but more often they are spam in the moment, especially if a big story has broken. I feel like it used to only occur when you first opened up Twitter, you'd see old highlights...now it feels like it's intertwined more...it's very annoying. Twitter is, by far, the most powerful and useful social media platform out there for information...I sure hope they aren't going to strangle it to death.
Unfortunately you can't turn off the algorithm which treats other people's favourites as if they were retweets, which makes me think twice about using the favourite feature at all. I know I've had stuff put into my feed which the person doing the favouriting would never have retweeted.
I wrote an extension/user script to filter those - and retweets - out into their own lists on the front page [1], as I just want a chronological timeline of what people are saying now, which mustn't be "engaging" enough for Twitter's purposes.
I second what you noticed. I now see myself with a WTF expression on my face when I am trying to figure out what happened with the linear timeline and all that junk I pretty much don't care about inserted in what I am interested to read. Feels like random ad inserts. Not good.
I suppose the same applies to many other ML products? Like Netflix's recommendations, Amazon's suggestions and almost all the ads you see these days?
I agree that the problem exists, but its not just Twitter, and this is an unfortunate side-effect of recommendations in general: even if you do count-based recommendations, you are going to have a bit of echo chamber.
Those two examples are fine applications of ML. The problem is when you're dealing with sequential, timestamped content that SHOULD be displayed in the order it was posted. I think companies should very judiciously apply ML in these cases, and only possibly for 'top stories' or huge events that are occurring. However it appears ML is being applied across the board, using multiple signals and throwing the chronological order of the content out of whack, which is very frustrating.
Empowering users with Machine Learning, i.e. offering simple powerful ML based filtering tools for the Twitter user.
More importantly allow opt out and configuration of stuffing feeds with politics and liked by those I follow.
But the idea is not to empower users but masticate users to provide more 'value' to Advertisers by selling them 21stC version of 'hits' - the false & forced engagement metric.
This all stems from the mentality that Twitter are serving the money not the user.
It is short-termism.
Hopefully crap-stuffing users will allowing the resurgence of a diverse market that necessitates open standards unlike our current hyper monopolies and their data silos.
I’m not even sort of interested in what Twitter’s heavy-handed definition of “healthy conversations” are.
I dare say they’re acting well outside of their wheelhouse. Their job is to provide a platform for discussion, not whatever that mess of corpspeak I just read is.
What better way than program a robot to decide what 'healthy conversations' are.
Dorsey's capitulation to the complaint army over his recent chicken sandwich says it all.
I do see the hate mobs calming down ( or being ignored ), eventually, but when that happens we know Dorsey and a lot of these CEOs have little or no backbone.
>Do you remember hiw bad YouTube comments have been?
Yes
>And it's significantly better lately?
It's gotten worse and a few youtubers I follow have simply disabled it in recent time (less than 1 month ago was the most recent one)
Normal conversation on youtube is barely possible since the algorithm randomly decides to not notify me of responses anymore or removes entire comments from my view that other people reference and I'm left wondering what is going on.
The only good thing about youtube comments is that I can remove them easily with a plugin.
> Normal conversation on youtube is barely possible
It's also interface. I've been notified of replies to comments, click the notification, and I'm not taken to the reply. This happens to me on mobile enough that I've basically just given up trying to engage for most things on youtube.
Happens on the desktop too. It's impossible to respond or follow up to anything on there. You'll get notified of unrelated comments, you're not able to respond to a specific person, everything is just in one parent thread. I've since blocked comments from even displaying.
Why are those bad comments? The first one is a bit ridiculous, but the others are fine. They're comments. They're not discussion points. YouTube isn't a forum or a social network. There's nothing compelling people to leave intelligent or even constructive points. The comment section is for people to note what they think. That's it.
When people say these sorts of things are bad I think it's because their expectations and understanding of a comments section are wrong.
It's just super repetitive, and actually good and original comments get buried because they don't match the hivemind.
Of course, it's a question of taste what comments should be more visible. If the community actually prefers reading the same stuff over and over again, then the current state is probably justified, and it's just a moronic community.
Depends what music you listen to. If you listen to smaller artists on videos that have under 1 million or 100k views you will see many more high effort comments talking about the band/band members or about their experience with the music.
e.g. "I got a chance to see these guys live in October, and [insert band member here] is actually a really cool guy. Talked to him afterwards and shared [so and so interaction]"
e.g. "This song was actually inspired by [such and such random factoid]"
[video has 28 dislikes]
7 people are morons!!!
9 people are sad they have no taste in music111
What is wrong with the 13 downvotes?
WHHHHHHHHYYYYYY don't 16 people have any taste?
Well it's obvious that 18 people don't have any taste.
21 downvotes can suck it!
22 people are morons!!!
WTF, 24 downvotes? There should be negative downvotes!
25 people are morons!!!
Well I see Hitler and his 26 closest friends have seen this video!
27 people are morons!!!
28 people hate don't appreciate art!!1
The comments got much better after Youtube added user ratings. Hardly "ML". I'm guessing they added ML later, but I haven't noticed any difference, to be honest...
And by "much better" I mean they went from amoeba level to early multi-cellular organism :)
Most of the bang for their buck was when they used a plain old sorting of those ratings. That already hid a lot of the sludge. The ML stuff is just a minor optimization compared to that.
Everything is just my opinion, of course, they're probably following a bunch of metrics I don't have access to and which could prove that the ML effort was worth it.
The idea is I have a timeline and am able to choose what's on it. Good, bad, ugly. It's up to me. If I don't like what someone's saying I unfollow, mute or block. Easy.
With Twitter, FB, and modern social media, they let their algorithm decide what I should see. They think they know what people want and ultimately what's best for me. I disagree with this so I opt-out of their services. Sadly. Because there are ( or were ) a lot of interesting and novel voices on there.
Also, I suppose at a certain point those 3XXX employees need to justify their existence.
And yes it's their prerogative to do whatever they want with their product. And yes I know private companies are not bound by the 1st Amendment.
If you're spectating, maybe. Completely falls apart when you try to engage in dialogue on Twitter, which is what both Twitter, Inc. and I want.
Say I follow someone because I like what they say. And I want to discuss what they're saying, or to explore existing discussions. I'm going into this ready to have a thoughtful debate or two.
So I open the replies, and they're what I consider to be garbage: flamewars, reaction GIFs, propaganda, straight-up bad-faith trolling, and worse. But maybe there's some good in here somewhere?
Assume I'm a typical human with emotions and stuff. Do I:
A) Immediately close the thread! It's not worth it, and I have the ability and willpower to bow out.
B) Scroll through the replies, muting and blocking people. Maybe if I do this enough I'll have a nicer experience on the next thread I open. Wow there sure are a lot of these folks!
C) Take the bait. Someone is wrong on the internet.
You know already, but I'll tell you anyway. I, typical human, tend to rush headlong into option C), which wastes my time, makes me unhappy, and gives me a negative perception of the quality of discussions on Twitter. Twitter, Inc. doesn't want that either, but they've picked these replies to show me. Clearly they don't know what kind of thing I think is garbage. So what can they do?
Replies with the most upvotes are at the top. That generally filters out the BS. There is a date posted versus upvote count balance that needs to be reached, but ML is not required.
And this all assumes you're trying to have conversation around someone with many many followers. If you're in a small circle, none of your argument applies.
Further posts by the original poster are at the top too.
Yes, you may have to filter through some posts on your own. If you plan on having a conversation with Obama, good luck. And for good reason.
But I don't want Twitter Inc filtering for me. Essentially upvoting and downvoting comments based on their algorithm. Sorry.
At least give users the choice to use their ML algorithm or not. I'd even pay to have it turned off or to tweak how I see my timeline.
Not enabling echochambering doesn't mean you get overwhelmed.
If the algorithms only ever selects things you already like, how would you discover things you might not know you like? Or change your mind about a subject because you only ever see tweets that agree with your worldview?
A good timeline would not only show you speech, ideas or content you agree to or like but also stuff you don't like and don't agree with.
> Like your post here? Or my present reply to it? And so on...
Except that Twitter thrives on controversy. There's controversy on HN as well, but escalations lead to flagging of content, not promotion of it.
>> one that echochambers your discovery
> Which is good, because nobody has enough time in the day to process every conceivable byte of information they might stumble across...
Strawman. This statement isn't about quantity, it's about content. Focusing on information that reinforces one's one view, instead of engaging in critical thought, is a dumbing-down.
>> one that censors arbitrarily
> OK, because while everyone may have the right to speak freely, not all speech needs to be heard by everyone...
Strawman. This isn't about what gets filtered, but who filters and how this information gets filtered.