We took "Show HN" out of the title. That's for when you're introducing a project, not adding new features. Please read <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/showhn.html" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/showhn.html</a>.
Interesting. My Mr. Rogers result is reassuring I suppose. I like my most insulting comment:<p><i>"Very useful. Can you add links to amazon/hulu/torrents?"</i><p>Sounds like someone tried to build a sarcasm detector.*<p>*Will this be my new most insulting comment?
Cool, but it doesn't take retweets, @replies, and quoted replies into account. My worst comments over on Reddit are where I quote someone else who said something mean, and the same goes for Twitter.<p>And the results for HN are truly head-scratching. Use of the word "fucking" regardless of context is apparently enough to elevate a comment to "worst" status. (Watch me get a few points just for this comment alone!)<p>Don't get me wrong, this is a neat tool, but it's going to be misused in character assassinations on others, especially with its current presentation, where phrases are used like "troll score", "most insulting" and so on.<p>I'd really suggest toning that presentation down and emphasizing the fact that this is imperfect until the algorithm has been tweaked further.
My worst comment on Reddit :<p>"Are you stupid?"<p>Sounds about right. Edit : Damn now I'm worrying this will become my worst HN comment too.<p>Double Edit : Just ran it again and now it's my worst comment on HN.
Is there an upper limit to the number of characters this will analyze? I've gotten into arguments here & on reddit that, while civil, are certainly more vitriolic than what the script found. All I can think is that longer diatribes are ignored?<p>From HN:
"I've researched the "why" and a couple years ago had the opportunity to discuss some of the broader ideas in the history & anthropology of locks. It was actually titled "Why do you lock your door?"
-emhart<p>From reddit:
"Very glad you dropped in. Nice to have someone with first hand experience offer this up, thanks."
-schuylertowne<p>From twitter:
"Here is the US patent filing for that taiwanese lock, so you can see the illustrations: <a href="https://t.co/K7F3aY6RTD"" rel="nofollow">https://t.co/K7F3aY6RTD"</a>
-shoebox
Concept is nice, landing page and the website are nice. What needs more work is the algorithm for determining hate. Almost all the comments that Hater News chewed out of my Reddit username were <i></i>not at all* trolling. Indeed some statements were even contributing to the discussion.
Interesting. However, my most insulting comment doesn't appear to be that insulting: (it's not like I've been very active on HN)<p>"Either your CPU is too fast or too slow. I can't really fix anything since I don't have a Mac to test with. It works fine on Windows."
Broken for network = HackerNews. All usernames including the suggested one and my own return the "Hmm That's probably not a real username." etc.
And then some random youtube video plays in the background. And there's a "Still crunching numbers" animation (when I modify the css on the page to hide the overlay).
And then "Something broke, sorry :(" and then back to home.
IPython Notebook is here: <a href="http://nbviewer.ipython.org/github/kevinmcalear/hater_news/blob/master/haterz_classification.ipynb" rel="nofollow">http://nbviewer.ipython.org/github/kevinmcalear/hater_news/b...</a> (to author: maybe this link instead of link to its source? accessibility...).
Only Twitter worked for me, but it was kind of cool to read some long forgotten tweets.<p>I don't really understand the periodic table concept. My first thought was that it grouped your insults into types, like logical fallacies versus outright insults. I feel like that would be more useful for introspection.
a lot of the links to reddit comments are broken, if the title of the page in reddit has a slash in it, the slash is not being ommited/escaped in the URL and so reddit can't find it.<p>Sample:
<a href="http://www.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/6dnve/Top%20Comedian%20Believes%20In%209/11%20Conspiracy/c03k7tl" rel="nofollow">http://www.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/6dnve/Top%20Comedi...</a>
is broken because it has a slash in the title (9/11)<p>Killing that slash fixes it:
<a href="http://www.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/6dnve/Top%20Comedian%20Believes%20In%20911%20Conspiracy/c03k7tl" rel="nofollow">http://www.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/6dnve/Top%20Comedi...</a>
My worst comment on reddit is insulting a Canadian for not liking hockey and insinuating that they don't have an appreciation for maple syrup.<p>I'm interested in how it manages to calculate this, because I'm a complete asshole on reddit sometimes.
Apparently, this is a negative comment:
"What do you with a bunch of books and an empty pod? A racing track of course! <a href="http://bit.ly/1wThvTK" rel="nofollow">http://bit.ly/1wThvTK</a> "
-pmelendezu "
My worst comment: "Yep, working less than 30 hrs really gives you a chance to live life. I take less pay and only have to work a half week."<p>Pretty much all of my "hater" comments were like this. Many were helpful answers to problem.
My worst tweet is insulting myself. (To be fair I rarely use twitter anyway).
I wonder if self insults are weighted any different than regular ones.<p>"I feel dumb for never thinking of using %2π"
I find the algorithm very funny because this tweet:<p>>Spike Lee produced a Bernie Mac, Cedric the Entertainer, and Steve Harvey comedy special?<p>Was apparently one of my worst.
I'm not sure how my tweet of "Nothing encourages you to finally fix your backups like a kernel panic during a OS update."<p>qualifies as hate?