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Overdosing on Celebrity Gossip, The News, and Low Quality Information

63 pointsby sunasraover 11 years ago

10 comments

draugadrottenover 11 years ago
<i>&quot;The problem with most news, gossip, and link-bait titled articles online is that they are filled with surface level information. Your life isn’t better off for reading them and you’re rarely better informed because of them.&quot;</i><p>Strangely enough, that is how I feel after reading this blog post: The title promised more than the content delivered. I recognize the problem, but the article is thin on insight beyond the observation.<p>It doesn&#x27;t provide insight. It ends with asking the reader what to do.
ZenoArrowover 11 years ago
Thank you for sharing this article sunasra, accurately describes how I spend (too much of) my time. I am slowly getting better at controlling how much infosugar I intake, but it&#x27;s still a pesky habit.<p>Most of the time I waste online is HN-related. I&#x27;ll read articles that at best I only have a passing interest in. Whilst I enjoy knowing a little about a lot, I&#x27;d still prefer to be chipping away at larger projects, even if I only have a few minutes at a time to spend. Time for another HN detox...
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mattgreenrocksover 11 years ago
Everywhere you find addicted users, look at who is feeding them, and you&#x27;ll find perverse incentives: whether they&#x27;re page views, contextual ads, or in-app purchases. Aggregators compete amongst one another for users, so they trickle out <i>all</i> content. They claim that quality content is voted to the top, but it is ultimately thinly-masked groupthink. Comment sections are often intellectual wastelands rife with people needing to yell and&#x2F;or &#x27;win&#x27; Internet points for no reason at all.<p>The world needs innovative thought, not people reinforcing the &#x27;right&#x27; opinions. I find social media is particularly bad at this: why is it normal to ingest everyone&#x27;s opinions on a daily basis? Why don&#x27;t we want that mental space for ourselves?<p>We&#x27;re far too content with the cheap substitutes for things that truly satisfy us. Facebook uses this to great effect, and aggregators do too.
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_fsover 11 years ago
That popup at the end of the article totally broke my concentration about the subject at hand. I quickly fell from thought to disgust when the popup came up and covered 1&#x2F;4 of the screen. Then I backed out of the site. Why do people insist on getting their users onboard a newsletter for a blog like this?
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lowmagnetover 11 years ago
This is almost entirely this post from a week ago: <a href="http://www.mrmoneymustache.com/2013/10/07/how-big-is-your-circle-of-control/" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.mrmoneymustache.com&#x2F;2013&#x2F;10&#x2F;07&#x2F;how-big-is-your-ci...</a>
humanrebarover 11 years ago
This article reads like a call for better curation. There&#x27;s too much information for everyone to be fully informed about everything. But (and here&#x27;s where I differ) it&#x27;s not acceptable to just remain ignorant about things I can&#x27;t affect. If nothing else, I can (and should) react strategically to even the biggest and the most foregone trends.<p>Journalism is exactly the answer to a call for better curation. News networks, newspapers, blogs, documentary film-makers, and so on, should be providing the high-level view of what is important and nothing more in an age where attention is a scarce resource.<p>Unfortunately, there isn&#x27;t (yet) a successful business model for journalism that rewards the content producer for being efficient. That is, newspapers don&#x27;t get rewarded for not producing a paper on slow news days (or for being shorter in general). Likewise, TV channels cannot pride themselves on providing a twelve-minute newscast covering the same information as the competition.<p>On the contrary, all modern sources of information (news, facebook, and otherwise) get rewarded for attracting eyeballs as much as possible, so there is an incentive to do the exact opposite: there&#x27;s no news today, so here&#x27;s a kitty fashion show or some linkbait to get your blood boiling.
evanlivingstonover 11 years ago
Er, Natural disasters, as caused by climate change, are increasingly within the sphere of human control. War is also very much a result of our own behavior. I have trouble with the argument that &#x27;ignoring&#x27; these things has a positive outcome.
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BigChiefSmokemover 11 years ago
Wikipedia is my modern and globalized version of CliffsNotes. I only deep dive into sources and research if I happen upon a subject incredibly interesting to me (my &quot;fun&quot; reading) or might help me get ahead with one of my projects (my &quot;work&quot; reading).<p>As for HN, this site provides more of the guilty pleasure of looking inside the tech bubble than actually being an incredible source of information. So to me it lies somewhere between the national news and Wikipedia.
bitofenglishover 11 years ago
I really identified with this article&#x27;s message. It is nicely written. For my part: in an effort to cut through some of the noise of one of the most popular channels - Twitter - I recently created and launched this service:<p><a href="http://qureet.com" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;qureet.com</a> - Find Meaning on Twitter.<p>FYI, it is implemented 100% in golang, and runs on a Raspberry Pi.
iambatemanover 11 years ago
Literally clicked away from this article to Facebook.<p>Maybe I have a problem. ;)