Ask HN: Make Flagging Activity Public?
21 points| Guid_NewGuid | 6 months ago
It is my understanding that the HN code-base is pretty much write-only so it's probably a tall ask but I think it would help confidence in the site at this... turbulent time globally, if people could do their own investigation of which accounts are jumping on stories to kill them.
This would be useful irrespective of your political slant, e.g. on issues like Israel-Palestine.
For the example story there are a few possibilities:
- people are sick of 'political' stories and flag them out of tedium
- there is a prevailing pro-Trump, anti-science majority of active users on the site
- there are active influence campaigns using sock-puppet accounts to hide and prevent discussion of ongoing attacks on science
The most likely answer is all-of-the-above. But why should such anti-speech activity as flagging be private? This may already be possible via the API so I'd be interested to learn that if so.
[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44961584
sjs382|6 months ago
I often flag submissions or comments when they go against the rules (sometimes written, sometimes unwritten) of the site.
I'm generally not willing to:
So, if these flags become public, I'll just stop flagging. I'm sure I'm not alone. I consider this a negative outcome of making flags public.Guid_NewGuid|6 months ago
a) exceed the likelihood of people doing this via commenting anyway
b) justify the opaque and powerful nature of flagging as-is
Perhaps you stopping flagging if you're not willing to justify a flag is a good outcome in aggregate? We have mods to kill threads which violate the guidelines already. But looking at the /active list there's certainly an amount of (probably organic) censorship of controversial threads in either direction (though my gut feel is it biases more towards censorship of articles about the latest outrages of US government).
I'm not really interested in say, Ruby, I think people should probably use languages which are type-safe if they want to avoid catastrophes in production and 1am pager calls. However if I see an article about Ruby I'm just going to not engage with it. Perhaps your existing interpretation of the unwritten rules is too broad and actually we ought to rein in the amount of flagging anyway?
eimrine|6 months ago
cherry_tree|6 months ago
Flagging should be just that; a flag for the moderation team to review the submission/comment. It should not at all come with an immediate downranking of the content itself until the moderation team has reviewed the flag and upholds it as appropriately flagged.
If flagging wasn’t a simple way to kill young discussion threads and instead users had to downvote the submissions they don’t like; then discussions couldn’t be so severely impacted by a minority of users.
krapp|6 months ago
Guid_NewGuid|6 months ago
This would allow anyone to perform network analysis and reporting and full audit ability and is a minimal level of accountability for using this functionality to close discussions down.
oehpr|6 months ago
It would work like this: When you flag a post for breaking the rules, the community's guidelines will pop up. You are then asked in this window to highlight the relevant section or sections of those rules that this post has violated. And I don't mean just "select which rule was violated", I mean "use your cursor and highlight the text of the rules that were violated." (with support for highlighting multiple sections if so desired).
This serves the following functions:
1. Communicates why something was flagged (obviously).
2. Forces the person who's flagging the submission to actually read the rules.
3. The subjectivity of the highlighting system is used to make Sybil attacks more obvious. I'll explain why after this list.
4. It differentiates flagging from downvoting. Downvoting is for saying "I don't like this". Flagging is for saying "This violates our community's rules".
As to why this helps reveal Sybil attacks: There are several subjective points on what, where, and how people will highlight rules. Should punctuation be included or not? Should the key word in the rule be highlighted? The key sentence? The whole section? What about examples? Should we include them? Or only highlight them? Users operating in good faith will cluster around common points in common areas, but will have different ways of doing so. So, if a block of users all have: the same input, in the same way, clustered around the same time, then it was likely a Sybil attack.
This system doesn't require that it de-anonymize the people who submit flags, but it does provide a form of publicly visible transparency as to why something was flagged.
Edit: I forgot to make clear, you would be able to see a heat map of the rules that were highlighted for a flagged post.
I'd be interested to hear any thoughts on this idea.
Paradigm2020|6 months ago
Than other random "judges" would be asked if the reason given by the "accuser" are correct. There would have to be some "cost" in karma to flag a post (or limit of X flags / day for X karma status or smth) and some reward in karma for being chosen as a judge/jury.
Also the need to have a minimum flagging weight and a minimum of judging weight and to reconcile conflicting votes.
Anyway would love to talk about it more but tbh it's probably not gonna happen also because most people don't like jury duty... Maybe when ai gets over the "hallucinations" but well at that point we can also get our individual ai's to read everything and judge for us
JustExAWS|6 months ago
Before the usual retorts come that I can only afford to think that way because I’m not a member of a “disaffected group”, my still living parents dealt with the Jim Crow south and my son who grew up in the suburbs all of his life still got looked at with suspicion walking around in our neighborhood.
But that doesn’t mean I want to see a dozen post a day about police brutality, BLM, the inequities in the justice system or whatever anti woke BS Trump was talking about today on HN.
What possible good discussion could come out of a post about Palestine vs Israel unless it was a technical “innovation” [sic] that one side or the other was using?
Guid_NewGuid|6 months ago
I think a lot of people agree with your reasons for flagging and wish politics didn't cross over into tech, but that doesn't really impinge either way on making flags public. (In the example article that prompted this a debate about the relative benefits of different vaccine research approaches seems patently tech/science based, but again it is not really relevant to a proposal to make the flags public record).
incomingpain|6 months ago
Makes sense to me why that story got flagged.
>- people are sick of 'political' stories and flag them out of tedium
Looking at active page, pretty minimal politics. So they are being flagged, the reasoning is unknown.
>- there is a prevailing pro-Trump, anti-science majority of active users on the site
lol the polar opposite is quite true. Virtually no support for trump on HN. Most of us arent in the USA, and those ive seen who are, are clearly democrats. Us Canadians hate trump pretty much, even the Maple MAGA crowd has disappeared.
>- there are active influence campaigns using sock-puppet accounts to hide and prevent discussion of ongoing attacks on science
<tinfoil> tags missing?
Guid_NewGuid|6 months ago
We have dang's word that he hasn't detected any funky behavior with respect to flagging and that these are organic events. But I don't see a reason that the information shouldn't be available. I struggle to think of a downside.
Not really relevant to your main point but the idea there aren't social media influence campaigns from all sides is more of a tinfoil position than acknowledging that there absolutely are, whether or not they are effective.
bediger4000|6 months ago