top | item 3481174

No New Accounts Today

718 points| pg | 14 years ago

Traffic is unprecedentedly high today, presumably because Reddit is blacked out. I don't want to repay them for their impressive stand by stealing their users, so I've temporarily turned off the ability to create new accounts.

94 comments

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[+] eof|14 years ago|reply
I am surprised you would think of it as 'stealing' users. More likely you are trying to avoid too many of a certain type of user that is only on HN because reddit is down.
[+] raganwald|14 years ago|reply
I imagine that too many new users on one day is a troublesome idea regardless of what site they’re from or why they arrive here.

It’s as simple as noting that new users are new and still learning from everyone else around them. When everybody is new, it’s hard to get a feel for the current culture and style.

I imagine that it would probably work on a permanent basis to gate new accounts to a certain fixed value per day or proportion of new to old accounts, e.g. .1% per day or whatever.

Personally, I came here from Reddit 1,791 days ago, so I will be the first to say that I hope we don’t have an “anti-Redditor refugee” policy, whether express or implied. Far better to demonstrate through action and voting what we value as a culture and welcome as many people to the site as we can handle without diluting our ability to teach by example.

[+] tokenadult|14 years ago|reply
I am surprised you would think of it as 'stealing' users.

This is almost surely an example of euphemism in the service of politeness. My favorite example of Paul Graham wording in the service of saying something firm nicely is "When disagreeing, please reply to the argument instead of calling names. E.g. 'That is an idiotic thing to say; 1 + 1 is 2, not 3' can be shortened to '1 + 1 is 2, not 3.'" I love the use of "can be shortened to" there, as if pg's only concern is saving people extra keystrokes. I think the polite phrase "stealing users" here similarly leaves another idea unexpressed.

[+] ramchip|14 years ago|reply
I assume he wrote it between the lines to be less offensive. It's not that we want to push people away, just signal that they should think before posting more than on Reddit.
[+] Eliezer|14 years ago|reply
It seems to me like a gesture that Reddit will probably appreciate (though I don't know whether they'd say so out loud, politeness probably requires them to say something like "Why, PG, good sir, you didn't have to do that!") and so I see no reason to question the truth of PG's stated motive.
[+] cynicalkane|14 years ago|reply
I never really liked how some HN users like to distinguish themselves as 'not Reddit'...

...but the two aren't mutually exclusive. After all, if Reddit users permanently migrate here, it actually does mean that Reddit's owners and admins are paying for their stand.

[+] ZenPsycho|14 years ago|reply
No it's not stealing users. It's copying users. You see, stealing implies....
[+] Cushman|14 years ago|reply
There's something cheeky about it, almost-- "Well, we wouldn't want to steal any of your users, haha!" wink

All in good fun, though, I suppose :)

[+] radu_floricica|14 years ago|reply
Better then Erlang posts, I guess. Also having this as the most voted post kind of ruined the subtlety of the gesture...
[+] Achshar|14 years ago|reply
Yes i guess that was a wise move but i think i would consider myself to be what you would call "Reddit crowd". But not all of them are like that. Its about culture and it usually takes some time for people to adapt to a new "culture".
[+] kmfrk|14 years ago|reply
I think it's a good point. When Mashable creates articles to help people thwart the Wikipedia black-out, I personally find that despicable.

Of course, the main difference is that allowing users to register would be a passive act, whereas Mashable is actively "profiting" on the SOPA black-out.

[+] bambax|14 years ago|reply
It can't be "stealing" since Reddit accounts don't expire when one opens another account on HN...
[+] Forrest7778|14 years ago|reply
I think that reddit would consider it stealing users as well as not wanting that type of user. I mean...can I combine those theories...am I allowed to do that?
[+] georgieporgie|14 years ago|reply
Regardless of whether this was a kind gesture or a defensive move, I think it was very well stated, and an excellent example of diplomacy. I think I learned something from it.
[+] olh|14 years ago|reply
pg, could you post the HN traffic stats for today as a post-mortem style post?
[+] pg|14 years ago|reply
We got just under 1.6 million page views, whereas on an ordinary weekday we'd get just under 1.3 million.
[+] icehawk|14 years ago|reply
I'd like to see this as well. I think a comparison against pre/post blackout trafic stats would be interesting examination of behavior during an outage.
[+] cryptoz|14 years ago|reply
I wonder if there's a startup opportunity in helping online communities avoid the Eternal September effect. Some would claim reddit has solved the problem (subreddits) but others would disagree, citing front-page quality decline. So it seems to be an unsolved, universal problem right now.

Hm.

[+] krschultz|14 years ago|reply
I wanted to look up Eternal September - but hit the Wikipedia anti-SOPA page for about the 8th time today. If nothing else, I bet a lot of people have learned how much they depend on Wikipedia today.
[+] lukasb|14 years ago|reply
See MetaFilter for an example of a community site that suffered a decline in quality (starting around 2002) and then recovered. I'm surprised that MeFi's "MetaTalk", which segregates talk about rules and norms in its own sub-forum, hasn't been more widely copied.
[+] larrys|14 years ago|reply
Funny there is also a "Eternal September effect" with regard to domain names. To this day we always have someone contact us and want to know if they can register a really good domain for the base reg fee because "it doesn't come up when I type it in".

The truth is though that the effect is the way many of us make our living. By what we know that others don't.

[+] aspir|14 years ago|reply
I doubt software could handle the problem. It would likely require some sort of consulting SWAT team to handle the issue, since it's such a policy and behavior driven problem. The reason HN has been the most successful in fighting the ES has been through the culture the PG built. Trolls are not tolerated, and off topic articles are punished ruthlessly.

If you think about it too hard, it seems a little brutal, but you have to remember that this is just a discussion board.

[+] eurleif|14 years ago|reply
Maybe you could enable people to build their own pay-for-registration high-quality communities, like MetaFilter or Something Awful, and take a share of the registration fees? Though, I'm not sure how many such communities the market can really support.
[+] yuhong|14 years ago|reply
Fortunately the reddit front page is customizable for registered users, and at the same time the additional users mean more ad money.
[+] pasiaj|14 years ago|reply
This seems fair, but I'd bet Eternal September was on the minds of the people who decided this.
[+] keeran|14 years ago|reply
I would have thought that while the effect was due to Reddit (and others) being down, it was more a case of existing users refreshing for fresh content, rather than potential new users coming to register.

Is there really that much crossover? I need to spend some time seeking HN-esque subreddits perhaps.

[+] redthrowaway|14 years ago|reply
I agree. I'd be interested to see both:

1) The increase in uniques (pageviews don't really count)

2) How many of those uniques are new. That is, what percentage of those IPs visiting today have not visited in the past month.

[+] zecho|14 years ago|reply
/r/programming is good, but often redundant with what's on HN. However, I do enjoy /r/technology and hanging around /r/learnprogramming.
[+] babarock|14 years ago|reply
Are there ways to measure how much of the traffic is actually due to reddit being out. I bet there are other reasons for the growth in traffic, like the fact that HN has been making a great job at covering SOPA/PIPA for the past few weeks, I wouldn't be surprised if part of the increase is due to natural SEO. I'm sure one could find other reasons too.

I'm not doubting pg's claim. I'm simply interested and curious: What are the tools available for the analyst/engineer/community manager to analyze the increase?

[+] kingkawn|14 years ago|reply
This is why Google is not blacked out completely, to avoid something similar with Bing.
[+] djtriptych|14 years ago|reply
It's an excellent policy. If these new folks are actually interested in hn, they'll come back tomorrow.
[+] larrys|14 years ago|reply
I wouldn't call it stealing users. I mean if you knew the people from reddit and they asked you and you agreed then that's one thing. But in a true situation of a site being taken down this is exactly what happens. People go elsewhere. What would happen if reddit was taken down for real? Would you do the same thing and for how long?

What you are saying in a way is that a company or organization's competitor (if you want to call it that) can do something by free choice and decision, then you have to do something as well or you may be viewed as doing the wrong thing and viewed as doing something not politically correct.

[+] pasbesoin|14 years ago|reply
PG, once again a stand up guy. Cheers!
[+] jetsnoc|14 years ago|reply
Thank you. I don't mind rage comics and kittens but if I wanted to read about those, well, YC wouldn't be my normal watercooler. I spend time here because I want to talk about hacking apps, hacking life and the different start-up business cycles and modalities. That's why YC is my day-to-day watercooler.
[+] ck2|14 years ago|reply
It certain is not stealing IMHO.

There are plenty of places to visit, dzone is another good site and maybe techmeme but neither of those have even a black bar on their site in solidarity.

HN does feel a tad sluggish though so maybe lack of new accounts helps prevent a total crash.

[+] sossles|14 years ago|reply
Not stealing, but it is profiting from goodwill. Attention is the currency of the web, and while you can't stop people looking for alternatives, you can be respectful about not profiting from it.
[+] solac3|14 years ago|reply
I find it funny that people of reddit try and keep the "youtube" community out, and hackernews wants to keep reddit out... Who wants to keep HN out??
[+] mathattack|14 years ago|reply
Bravo! Despite the folks saying, "It's not stealing," I think there is good reason to make a principled stand. Reddit is not a competitor.
[+] g3orge|14 years ago|reply
I don't see it as stealing. reddit is a great community, but completely different from HN.
[+] iscrewyou|14 years ago|reply
Yeah, we wouldn't want any memes popping up on HN now would we?
[+] unknown|14 years ago|reply

[deleted]

[+] randomdata|14 years ago|reply
From what I remember, Digg was given a chance to fix the problems, but it was too little too late. Of course I understand Digg's point of view too, their hands were rather tied; going back wasn't an option.