It seems to me like the main difference is that Habryka just trusts authors to “garden their spaces” more than I do, and wants to actively encourage this, whereas I’m reluctantly trying to accommodate such authors. I’m not sure what’s driving this difference though.
I’m not certain that this is the crux, but I’ll try again to explain that why I think it’s good to give people that sort of agency. I am probably repeating myself somewhat.
I think incompatibilities often drive people away (e.g. at LessOnline I have let ppl know they can ask certain ppl not to come to their sessions, as it would make them not want to run the sessions, and this is definitely not due to criticism but to conflict between the two people). That’s one reason why I think this should be available.
I think bad commenters also drive people away. There are bad commenters who seem fine when inspecting any single comment but when inspecting longer threads and longer patterns they’re draining energy and provide no good ideas or arguments. Always low quality criticisms, stated maximally aggressively, not actually good at communication/learning. I can think of many examples.
I think it’s good to give individuals some basic level of agency over these situations, and not require active input from mods each time. This is for cases where the incompatibility is quite individual, or where the user’s information comes from off-site interactions, and also just because there are probably a lot of incompatibilities and we already spend a lot of time each week on site-moderation. And furthermore ppl are often quite averse to bringing up personal incompatibilities with strangers (i.e. in a DM to the mods who they’ve never interacted with before and don’t know particularly well).
Some people will not have the principles to tend their garden appropriately, and will inappropriately remove people with good critiques. That’s why it’s important that they cannot prevent the user from writing posts or quick takes about their content. Most substantial criticisms on this site have come in post and quick takes form, such as Wentworth’s critiques of other alignment strategies, or the sharp left turn discourse, or Natalia’s critiques of Guzey’s sleep hypotheses / SMTM’s lithium hypothesis, or Eliezer’s critique of the bioanchors report.
So it seems to me like it’s needed for several reasons, and basically won’t change the deep character of the site where there’s tons of aggressive and harsh criticism on LW. And I also basically expect most great and critical users not to get restricted in this particular way (e.g. Gwern, Habryka, Wentworth, more). So while I acknowledge there will be nonzero inappropriate uses of it that increase the friction of legitimate criticism, I think it won’t be a big effect size overall on the ability and frequency of criticism, and it will help a great deal with a common class of very unpleasant scenarios that drive good writers away.
I think incompatibilities often drive people away (e.g. at LessOnline I have let ppl know they can ask certain ppl not to come to their sessions, as it would make them not want to run the sessions, and this is definitely not due to criticism but to conflict between the two people). That’s one reason why I think this should be available.
This is something I currently want to accommodate but not encourage people to use moderation tools for, but maybe I’m wrong. How can I get a better sense of what’s going on with this kind of incompatibility? Why do you think “definitely not due to criticism but to conflict”?
I think bad commenters also drive people away. There are bad commenters who seem fine when inspecting any single comment but when inspecting longer threads and longer patterns they’re draining energy and provide no good ideas or arguments. Always low quality criticisms, stated maximally aggressively, not actually good at communication/learning. I can think of many examples.
It seems like this requires a very different kind of solution than either local bans or mutes, which most people don’t or probably won’t use, so can’t help in most places. Like maybe allow people to vote on commenters instead of just comments, and then their comments get a default karma based on their commenter karma (or rather the direct commenter-level karma would contribute to the default karma, in addition to their total karma which currently determines the default karma).
Most substantial criticisms on this site have come in post and quick takes form, such as Wentworth’s critiques of other alignment strategies, or the sharp left turn discourse, or Natalia’s critiques of Guzey’s sleep hypotheses / SMTM’s lithium hypothesis, or Eliezer’s critique of the bioanchors report.
I’m worried about less “substantial” criticisms that are unlikely to get their own posts, like just pointing out a relatively obvious mistake in the OP, or lack of clarity, or failure to address some important counterargument.
This is something I currently want to accommodate but not encourage people to use moderation tools for, but maybe I’m wrong. How can I get a better sense of what’s going on with this kind of incompatibility? Why do you think “definitely not due to criticism but to conflict”?
I mean I’ve mostly gotten a better sense of it by running lots of institutions and events and had tons of complaints bubble up. I know it’s not just because of criticism because (a) I know from first-principles that conflicts exist for reasons other than criticism of someone’s blogposts, and (b) I’ve seen a bunch of these incompatibilities. Things like “bad romantic breakup” or “was dishonorable in a business setting” or “severe communication style mismatch”, amongst other things.
You say you’re not interested in using “moderation tools” for this. What do you have in mind for how to deal with this, other than tools for minimizing interaction between two people?
Like maybe allow people to vote on commenters instead of just comments, and then their comments get a default karma based on their commenter karma (or rather the direct commenter-level karma would contribute to the default karma, in addition to their total karma which currently determines the default karma).
It’s a good idea, and maybe we should do it, but I think doesn’t really address the thing of unique / idiosyncratic incompatibilities. Also it would be quite socially punishing for someone to know that they’re publicly labelled net negative as a commenter, rather than simply that their individual comments so-far have been considered poor contributions, and making a system this individually harsh is a cost to be weighed, and it might make it overall push away high-quality contributors more than it helps.
I’m worried about less “substantial” criticisms that are unlikely to get their own posts, like just pointing out a relatively obvious mistake in the OP, or lack of clarity, or failure to address some important counterargument.
This seems then that making it so that a short list of users are not welcome to comment on a single person’s post is much less likely to cause these things to be missed. The more basic mistakes can be noticed by a lot of people. If it’s a mistake that only one person can notice due to their rare expertise or unique perspective, I think they can get a lot of karma by making it a whole quick take or post.
Like, just to check, are we discussing a potential bad future world if this feature gets massively more use? Like, right now there are a ton of very disagreeable and harsh critics on LessWrong and there’s very few absolute bans. I’d guess absolute bans being on the order of 30-100 author-commenter pairs over the ~7 years we’ve had this, and weekly logged-in users being ~4,000 these days. The effect size so far has been really quite tiny. My guess is that it could probably increase like 10x and still not be a very noticeable friction for criticism on LessWrong for basically all good commenters.
It seems like this requires a very different kind of solution than either local bans or mutes, which most people don’t or probably won’t use, so can’t help in most places. Like maybe allow people to vote on commenters instead of just comments, and then their comments get a default karma based on their commenter karma (or rather the direct commenter-level karma would contribute to the default karma, in addition to their total karma which currently determines the default karma).
I think better karma systems could potentially be pretty great, though I’ve historically always found it really hard to find something much better, mostly for complexity reasons. See this old shortform of mine on a bunch of stuff that a karma system has to do simultaneously:
I’m not certain that this is the crux, but I’ll try again to explain that why I think it’s good to give people that sort of agency. I am probably repeating myself somewhat.
I think incompatibilities often drive people away (e.g. at LessOnline I have let ppl know they can ask certain ppl not to come to their sessions, as it would make them not want to run the sessions, and this is definitely not due to criticism but to conflict between the two people). That’s one reason why I think this should be available.
I think bad commenters also drive people away. There are bad commenters who seem fine when inspecting any single comment but when inspecting longer threads and longer patterns they’re draining energy and provide no good ideas or arguments. Always low quality criticisms, stated maximally aggressively, not actually good at communication/learning. I can think of many examples.
I think it’s good to give individuals some basic level of agency over these situations, and not require active input from mods each time. This is for cases where the incompatibility is quite individual, or where the user’s information comes from off-site interactions, and also just because there are probably a lot of incompatibilities and we already spend a lot of time each week on site-moderation. And furthermore ppl are often quite averse to bringing up personal incompatibilities with strangers (i.e. in a DM to the mods who they’ve never interacted with before and don’t know particularly well).
Some people will not have the principles to tend their garden appropriately, and will inappropriately remove people with good critiques. That’s why it’s important that they cannot prevent the user from writing posts or quick takes about their content. Most substantial criticisms on this site have come in post and quick takes form, such as Wentworth’s critiques of other alignment strategies, or the sharp left turn discourse, or Natalia’s critiques of Guzey’s sleep hypotheses / SMTM’s lithium hypothesis, or Eliezer’s critique of the bioanchors report.
So it seems to me like it’s needed for several reasons, and basically won’t change the deep character of the site where there’s tons of aggressive and harsh criticism on LW. And I also basically expect most great and critical users not to get restricted in this particular way (e.g. Gwern, Habryka, Wentworth, more). So while I acknowledge there will be nonzero inappropriate uses of it that increase the friction of legitimate criticism, I think it won’t be a big effect size overall on the ability and frequency of criticism, and it will help a great deal with a common class of very unpleasant scenarios that drive good writers away.
This is something I currently want to accommodate but not encourage people to use moderation tools for, but maybe I’m wrong. How can I get a better sense of what’s going on with this kind of incompatibility? Why do you think “definitely not due to criticism but to conflict”?
It seems like this requires a very different kind of solution than either local bans or mutes, which most people don’t or probably won’t use, so can’t help in most places. Like maybe allow people to vote on commenters instead of just comments, and then their comments get a default karma based on their commenter karma (or rather the direct commenter-level karma would contribute to the default karma, in addition to their total karma which currently determines the default karma).
I’m worried about less “substantial” criticisms that are unlikely to get their own posts, like just pointing out a relatively obvious mistake in the OP, or lack of clarity, or failure to address some important counterargument.
I mean I’ve mostly gotten a better sense of it by running lots of institutions and events and had tons of complaints bubble up. I know it’s not just because of criticism because (a) I know from first-principles that conflicts exist for reasons other than criticism of someone’s blogposts, and (b) I’ve seen a bunch of these incompatibilities. Things like “bad romantic breakup” or “was dishonorable in a business setting” or “severe communication style mismatch”, amongst other things.
You say you’re not interested in using “moderation tools” for this. What do you have in mind for how to deal with this, other than tools for minimizing interaction between two people?
It’s a good idea, and maybe we should do it, but I think doesn’t really address the thing of unique / idiosyncratic incompatibilities. Also it would be quite socially punishing for someone to know that they’re publicly labelled net negative as a commenter, rather than simply that their individual comments so-far have been considered poor contributions, and making a system this individually harsh is a cost to be weighed, and it might make it overall push away high-quality contributors more than it helps.
This seems then that making it so that a short list of users are not welcome to comment on a single person’s post is much less likely to cause these things to be missed. The more basic mistakes can be noticed by a lot of people. If it’s a mistake that only one person can notice due to their rare expertise or unique perspective, I think they can get a lot of karma by making it a whole quick take or post.
Like, just to check, are we discussing a potential bad future world if this feature gets massively more use? Like, right now there are a ton of very disagreeable and harsh critics on LessWrong and there’s very few absolute bans. I’d guess absolute bans being on the order of 30-100 author-commenter pairs over the ~7 years we’ve had this, and weekly logged-in users being ~4,000 these days. The effect size so far has been really quite tiny. My guess is that it could probably increase like 10x and still not be a very noticeable friction for criticism on LessWrong for basically all good commenters.
I think better karma systems could potentially be pretty great, though I’ve historically always found it really hard to find something much better, mostly for complexity reasons. See this old shortform of mine on a bunch of stuff that a karma system has to do simultaneously:
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/EQJfdqSaMcJyR5k73/habryka-s-shortform-feed?commentId=8meuqgifXhksp42sg