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by inopinatus 2927 days ago
No-one will lie on their deathbed wishing they'd scored more points in the Internet popularity contests.

However, I observed my remarks receiving a hidden downweighting following moderator action some time ago. dang confirmed since that they have a "penalty box" mechanism.

I post less frequently as a result, because I think fewer people will see what I have to say.

1 comments

Forget hidden. I've noticed that within two minutes of every comment I make, even if they eventually end up positive, I get hit with 3-6 downvotes. Almost as if there's a bot.

People have noticed: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17274713 (dipped down to -5 before eventually settling at the current +7)

> This chronic downvoting on HN is getting boring.

> Not only that - respected HN citizens need to create new throwaway accounts on order to speak their mind. It's becoming a new normal. That's ridiculous.

> it's tiring to express your opinion here and contribute to a conversation only to have it downvoted because it wasn't the right contribution.

The problem is that the "penalty box" mechanism doesn't distinguish between unpopular but well-reasoned opinions and offensive behavior. People here, like in many other online forums, are all-too-quick to downvote other opinions. This is particular stark in discussions around characters like Elon Musk, where for years criticisms were downvoted and flagged (and only recently has it become safe to comment negatively on the behaviors of Tesla and Musk)

The Reddit model (including HN) is inherently bad. Being downvoted for proposing a contrarian opinion is not a good model for discussion. I say this as someone with a moderate (small) amount of karma here.

If you value minority opinions more than what the hivemind thinks, the reddit model is inherently broken. The merit of the traditional forum model is that you can't suppress minority opinions - they are always there to read (unless removed by a mod). No downvoting, no flagging, no "dead" posts that are too negative to show up.

The SA model (pay $5 to register, if you are violently breaking the rules you get banned and you have to pay another $5 to unban your account) is massively better. It funds moderators. It funds server bills. It puts a direct pricetag on being a fucktard. It does not suppress dissenting opinions.

Lots of people will hate it. The quality of posting will also improve. Grandfather everyone who posts here in, ban them if they are fucktards, the quality of posting improves.

It's bad on the small scale of say like a post, but I think it works on the larger scale of the community at large.

If you make a post and it goes into negatives not because you're being an ass, but because it just goes against the groupthink, whatever. Your overall karma will go down a touch. There comes a point where no one post is going to devastate your overall standing.

But if every post you make gets downvoted, isn't that indicative of a larger problem?

But that's looking at the problem solely from a "user" perspective.

It's still bad from a content perspective because it means good, relevant content that goes against the groupthink gets buried.

I have noticed a greater preponderance of downvoting in recent months as well. However I've attributed that to the growing influence of Reddit, a forum in which brigading is common, voting is less about noise cancellation and more about memetic conformance, and where people will downvote if they disliked your punctuation or are simply having a rough morning.