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Ask HN: Is it even worth reading news outside of HN?

47 pointsby shrvtvover 3 years ago
A part of me is overloaded with tons of news (which turn out being a noise after all) and «Last hour Ipad deals!!!» garbage in RSS. Another part thinks all the worthy news are showing up on HN within a few hours anyway.<p>The question is, am I missing out on anything if I only visit HN?

45 comments

muzaniover 3 years ago
Yes, there&#x27;s a strong echo chamber effect. Also the community is heavily leaning towards SF&#x2F;USA.<p>There&#x27;s some major news where I live about floods, which was predicted by climate change experts. There&#x27;s a short term effect - helping flood victims, and long term - deciding how to deal with climate change in our backyard. Mainstream media is blaming drainage, but Twitter has actual experts with data and modeling, who point out that no amount of drainage is going to stop certain cities from being underwater in 30 years.<p>On top of that, HN shows mostly news <i>today</i> and you&#x27;ll miss on more important news of the week, month, quarter, and so on.<p>I&#x27;ve been stalking certain people on HN and only then did I notice news that were actually relevant to me. Such as certain deaths that I really care about, the opioid epidemic, Omicron, these things that are actually personal or actionable.<p>You can also do what I do and find a good friend who talks about these things. People are great news aggregators too, and they want someone to gossip to.
jtolmarover 3 years ago
Try finding a state-owned news outlet for a country you don&#x27;t live in, and filter to their coverage of your country specifically. The layers of removal mean it&#x27;s already filtered by stuff so important that people in another country noticed. And an outside view is usually going to be less biased, except on a handful of issues that&#x27;ll be extremely obvious.<p>Some examples for US people:<p>- BBC - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bbc.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;topics&#x2F;cx1m7zg01xyt&#x2F;united-states" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bbc.com&#x2F;news&#x2F;topics&#x2F;cx1m7zg01xyt&#x2F;united-states</a><p>- Al Jazeera - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.aljazeera.com&#x2F;where&#x2F;united-states" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.aljazeera.com&#x2F;where&#x2F;united-states</a><p>- TeleSUR - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.telesurtv.net&#x2F;SubSecciones&#x2F;en&#x2F;country&#x2F;us&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.telesurtv.net&#x2F;SubSecciones&#x2F;en&#x2F;country&#x2F;us&#x2F;</a>
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throwaway_2009over 3 years ago
I don&#x27;t really think that reading news improves my life. In some cases it directly contradicts my lived experience and understanding (loosely it could be described as propaganda, but often it&#x27;s just nonsense for clicks). In other cases, it&#x27;s just fluff.<p>I do it anyway, but only really because it&#x27;s accessible. If it weren&#x27;t a few clicks away, I don&#x27;t think I&#x27;d bother.<p>Particularly over the past year or so, my life has been improved by simply ignoring what the news is saying because it&#x27;s been so conflicting and nonsensical.<p>So, yeah. I&#x27;d say that it&#x27;s only worth doing something if it improves your life. If it does, crack on. If not, well, there&#x27;s a big world out there and a lot to do.
knaik94over 3 years ago
Popular HN story topics are pretty narrow when it comes to seeing the bigger picture of what&#x27;s going on in the world.<p>I don&#x27;t check often but a quick way to see interesting topical news is seeing the trending tab on Twitter. It&#x27;s not always meaningful but it does a good job exposing me to things that I wouldn&#x27;t choose to look up.<p>HN lacks meaningful discussion on basically any works of art, like films and tv. Sports aren&#x27;t brought up either. It&#x27;s not just politics that gets left out. Book recommendations on HN are also mostly focused on productivity and tech. I appreciate that it creates an environment that&#x27;s not emotionally taxing but I also realize that it is a bubble.
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haunterover 3 years ago
&gt;The question is, am I missing out on anything if I only visit HN?<p>Yes, HN is an echo chamber like any other community. The more time you spend here you can see that. Especially if you follow the site with RSS where dead and flagged submissions are also archived, comments there usually paint a better picture about the whole site (ie see the echo chamber part)<p>My favorite is the minimum 20 point submissions feed. Those usually have enough traction already. Now I don&#x27;t open every single link but if you find any dead&#x2F;removed and&#x2F;or flagged submissions from those then that&#x27;s where the people usually goes against the hivemind&#x2F;content guideline of the site. YET it already gained enough points so should be an interesting one <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hnrss.org&#x2F;newest?points=20" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hnrss.org&#x2F;newest?points=20</a>
ploumover 3 years ago
Is it even worth reading news?<p>corrected the title for you.<p>News those days is nothing more than &quot;socially acceptable entetainment for grownups&quot;. There’s a reason why lot of industry call the whole package &quot;infotainment&quot;.<p>What’s worth reading? What has an impact on your life. What will change some of your decisions. In that regard, Proust told it a long time ago: what’s important is in the books (probably already around you). News is just a distraction except for your very professional niche (and even in that case, if an information is important for you, the world will manage to pass the memo).<p>So : is it even worth reading news? No, for most people. (in fact, the world would probably be better if less people were reading the news).<p>If news in entertainment, then the answer is clear: read what is fun for you
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coffeefirstover 3 years ago
I think you have the problem right but the answer wrong.<p>You&#x27;re overexposed to the firehose of noise and want to get away from that but still be reasonably informed. This is a good idea.<p>If you can pick one or two high quality publications (one local, one national&#x2F;global) to check <i>once</i> per day (many have really good newsletters), you&#x27;ll probably be pretty happy with that balance.<p>HN is not the right tool for this because it is a tech forum that sometimes discusses news.
beebeepkaover 3 years ago
This site, while great, is incredibly US centric so most of what is posted barely makes sense to me. I find myself hitting that &quot;hide&quot; button often enough that I started thinking about writing a Firefox extension that would hide anything that has China in the title and everything from a popular US newspaper. The amount of manufactured concent that ends up being posted here is just overwhelming. No wonder I find myself baffled reading the usual takes on matters outside tech
setumover 3 years ago
If everyone stops reading outside of HN, we won’t have HN posts to begin with. So YES, not everyone should stop reading outside HN.
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beefieldover 3 years ago
Go and read &quot;Stop reading the news&quot; by Rolf Dobelli. No, you do not miss anything with any news source, but but you may want to take steps to avoid being in only this one echo chamber.
n-e-wover 3 years ago
The principal problem (alongside @knaik94) is correlation &#x2F; orthogonality of news and, to a lesser extent, sources and world-view.<p>You want a diverse news feed. If you subscribe to, say, the Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg and Reuters they will, almost certainly, cover pretty much the same stories in much the same, safe way. You get correlation of story, worldview and topic. You didn&#x27;t need to subscribe to all of them. Just one would have covered 99 percent of what you were looking for. I used to read the FT out of that bunch for one gem of orthogonality -- Lucy Kellaway. Sadly, she is long gone.<p>HN solves part of this problem by crowd-curating a diverse range of <i>sources</i> but there will still be a high correlation of <i>topics</i> (and likely bias &#x2F; worldview, too).<p>Long story short, news filtering is a dimensionality reduction and optimisation problem across tensors of different &quot;characteristics; Maybe you really like an echo chamber. Perhaps you really like to get all sides of the story. Maybe you want just news on sports from journalists who hate your team.<p>That&#x27;s a tough problem.<p>But the easiest path is to realise that, by default, almost all news sources are correlated -- so just pick the one you like best and ditch all the others. I promise you won&#x27;t notice. After that, work on realising, as Taleb has pointed out, that &quot;to be cured of reading news, spend a month reading only news from one year ago&quot;. You&#x27;ll learn pretty quick that outside of reporting facts, opinion is usually junk. Treat it as entertainment.
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ggmover 3 years ago
Yes. Consider paying a small amount to specific news agencies for news you trust, and graze the margins of other, including possibly contrary view sites to understand perspectives.<p>I pay for the guardian. I read nytimes, wapo and drudge to understand how others see it.
lawrenceyanover 3 years ago
HN is definitely manipulated as well. But you aren&#x27;t necessarily missing out on anything if you only visit this site for news at the same time.<p>If you&#x27;re genuinely overloaded, I&#x27;d say you&#x27;re probably okay. It might be worthwhile to consider the value of being able to see different perspectives, even if often times the content is rehashed (e.g. What is being said differently? What is omitted in one and not the other?). I think everyone, if they have the time, should take a historiography course because these are the kinds of things you learn about.<p>It&#x27;s especially important now, given the technology accelerated world we live in today of effectively instantaneous global mass-communication.
analog31over 3 years ago
I believe yes, because it&#x27;s unavoidable that any mature forum settles on an overton window, accepted ideology, however you want to put it.<p>I deal with the overload by being a &quot;slow&quot; thinker. I figure that nearly anything worth knowing, will still be worth knowing in a week. The noise will be gone.<p>It helps to be Old. For instance I have good statistics on the percentage of cases, where I&#x27;ve looked back and regretted supporting a particular party or candidate in an election. This gives me a good handle on whether I need to rethink my political views urgently, or if I can wait until after the next election cycle.
quaffapintover 3 years ago
For daily (weekday) general news I&#x27;ve been enjoying the 1440 newsletter. Just the facts in a quick email. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;join1440.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;join1440.com&#x2F;</a>
lordgrenvilleover 3 years ago
Most news (geopolitics, economic indicators, natural disasters, etc.), no. Read it only if you enjoy it.<p>However, I think one type of news is essential: that about what your government is doing. Are legislators being led by lobbyists? Are regulators captured by big business? Are politicians breaking promises without good reasons?<p>Following this, and voting accordingly, is necessary for democracy to function.
newsbinatorover 3 years ago
I read news outside HN but put no faith in it. I read news on HN and, depending on the comments section, put some faith in it.
LinuxBenderover 3 years ago
In some parts of the US you can get some local <i>events</i> on patch [1] but coverage is very limited in some states, especially in the midwest. I don&#x27;t know of any sites that have full unredacted news and as far as I can tell most investigative journalists are either gone or have their own little websites that are excluded from search engines. As far as I know all the corporate news sites are owned by the same handful of parent companies and very restricted on what topics they cover and how they are permitted to spin the events. All of that said I still occasionally find interesting stories on the corporate media sites and just accept that I am only seeing a tiny fraction of what is going on through the lens of a corporation.<p>[1] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;patch.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;patch.com&#x2F;</a>
elliottinventover 3 years ago
Yes, otherwise you&#x27;ll miss out on world events that are important but not necessarily interesting to hackers.
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mattowen_ukover 3 years ago
As much as I love HN, it <i>is</i> an echo chamber on some topics. Also sometimes people are too afraid to post a contrary opinion for fear of getting voted down to oblivion, as such some threads just become full of &#x27;me-too&#x27; type comments.<p>My wish is for more text centric HN-alike forums, which cover the topics that HN doesn&#x27;t, but is populated by the same type of people that HN has - i.e. mostly polite and knowledgeable, with a desire to contribute to the discussion.<p>Reddit is <i>not</i> it, nor are any of the other forums I&#x27;ve found so far.
tsbischofover 3 years ago
What you miss out on is anything to do with your geographic community. Try looking for sources of local journalism like alt weeklies and zines based in your area. These tend to be published less often and curate for long-running issues rather than attention-grabbing headlines
noudover 3 years ago
I have a membership on the Science [1]. I read the Science once a week. The Science contains difficult articles, which are often worth reading as they are explaining something new without making any compromises or trying to simplify the results. Besides HN and Science that I try all other news. I think you&#x27;re better off without news. [2]<p>[1] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.science.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.science.org&#x2F;</a><p>[2] - <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gwern.net&#x2F;docs&#x2F;culture&#x2F;2010-dobelli.pdf" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gwern.net&#x2F;docs&#x2F;culture&#x2F;2010-dobelli.pdf</a>
jeeyoungkover 3 years ago
Find sources you like. Over time I settled with:<p>- TheInformation<p>- WSJ<p>- Economist<p>- London Review of Books (if you were to call this &quot;news&quot;)
osivertssonover 3 years ago
What is news? Consider reading a 10-20-50-100 year old news magazine, it is a lot easier to see through the biases and agendas in todays news after this. A lot of it is PR or fear-inducing to sell you status or prop up the weapons industry.<p>That said I do like long-form news &#x2F; docs that focus on the ordinary man on the ground. Just remember there is never a truly objective lens.<p>If you just want a different view that includes politics consider Al Jazeera english and Russia Today english.
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travisdover 3 years ago
I highly recommend The Syllabus (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.the-syllabus.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.the-syllabus.com&#x2F;</a>). It’s paid (not outrageous) and they curate various high quality media (books, articles, academic studies, podcasts, videos, etc.) across a number of topics. When you sign up you choose which areas you’re more interested in and it’s personalized (ever so slightly) based on that.
renewiltordover 3 years ago
HN is mostly a tech culture blog aggregator. You’ll miss most of hard tech blogposts if you’re here. You’ll also miss almost all startup news. M<p>If you care about current affairs you’ll miss that too.<p>Ultimately, there’s no substitute for doing your own aggregation. But a good start is to find someone you like and expand from their Twitter&#x2F;Substack. For me that’s John Carmack and Gwern.
alexmingoiaover 3 years ago
You’re always going to miss out on something. That’s life. You can’t know everything, focus on everything, and be everywhere.<p>The danger is consuming without intention. It’s useful to ask yourself why you’re reading the news. Is it what you really want to be doing? Or is it a mindless habit of filling time?
apricot13over 3 years ago
I make a point to read local news and the comments (and occasionally facebook). I think only reading HN tricks you into thinking people will a) read the whole article b) understand the article c) have read further on the topic d) will contribute respectfully to the conversation and e) cite sources and question things said.
noodles_nomoreover 3 years ago
I follow soylentnews.org for &quot;nutritious&quot; tech news. It&#x27;s an old slashdot fork, from back when &#x2F;. changed ownership (IIRC), so it must be going for almost a decade already. Their determination to provide only high quality submissions is admirable and yet I never see it mentioned anywhere.
moltarover 3 years ago
I don’t habitually read or watch the traditional news media for a long time. I don’t feel any negative effect.<p>What I do instead is I have a curated RSS feed of things I’m interested in. Not only websites by the way, I try to RSS anything. Subreddits, GitHub repos, mailing lists, blogs, podcasts.
eljimmyover 3 years ago
I really like Drudge Report because the layout is so basic and similar to websites from the early days of the web. I figure it&#x27;s also worth noting that despite the conservative lean, I do find it is a good source for lots of various world news.
MilnerRouteover 3 years ago
You&#x27;re also not getting local news.<p>The experience of reading a newspaper every day really startled me. When I&#x27;m given a set of news items picked by a knowledgeable editor, I hear about things I just never would&#x27;ve sought out on my own.
conversationover 3 years ago
I generally stick to HN as well but I also I like to read The Conversation[1] and my local news every so often.<p>1- <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;theconversation.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;theconversation.com</a>
antisthenesover 3 years ago
I combine HN for global&#x2F;tech news and local news for...well, local &amp; neighborhood news, like County and City politics, etc.<p>Together, it&#x27;s enough and frankly more time than I have for news anyway.
smoldesuover 3 years ago
Short answer: Yes.<p>Longer answer: Staying in any kind of echo chamber for too long is a bad idea. Like-minded people will reinforce ideas that they like, and it can be an isolating and potentially damaging experience to exclusively read from HN. The real crown jewel in HN&#x27;s crown is crowdsourced link aggregation, and there are a lot of aggregators for a lot of different topics. Take some time to find quality sources, vet them for a short while and incorporate them into your daily reading. There&#x27;s a lot of information out there these days, so it can seem appealing to hide from it. There are also really high-quality information sifting tools available though.
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stillbourneover 3 years ago
Is it even worth huffing farts that aren&#x27;t my own?
BeetleBover 3 years ago
A key aspect is missing from your question:<p>Why do you want to read the news? What is your goal?<p>(Answers like &quot;So I can be informed&quot; simply beg the question).
readthenotes1over 3 years ago
I often get more out of the comments here than I do the article. I am grateful for HN, and you, though I do have other sources.
bagacrapover 3 years ago
there is worthy news that doesn&#x27;t make it to hn, but also lots of worthy news that doesn&#x27;t make it to CNN and plenty that doesn&#x27;t make it to CNN but is in fact newsworthy. So if the question is whether you should read what the old media passes off as news, don&#x27;t bother.
mvindover 3 years ago
I dont regard HN as a news site. Not that much of critical importance is discussed here.
sys_64738over 3 years ago
<a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;68k.news" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;68k.news</a>
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JoeyBananasover 3 years ago
Absolutely. I use an RSS feed to follow news sources that I am interested in.
omarhaneefover 3 years ago
You’re not missing much, but you may be curious to know:<p>Joe Biden is president. Inflation is rampant. There is a new variant (Omicrom) that can get through two doses but might be less severe. Kentucky is recovering from severe weather. US left Afghanistan this year.
cblconfederateover 3 years ago
you read the same news everywhere
dsegoover 3 years ago
there is a nice digest of hn posts on n-gate.com, you should check it out.