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comment by rooibos
rooibos  ·  4026 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Comment sorting

I think that personalized ways or algorithms to sort comments could be a really good thing, if only for the fact that experimentation in this area could possibly lead to something new and interesting and a competitive advantage for hubski.

In order to compete with already existing websites (i.e., reddit), hubski has to differentiate itself in some significant way. No one's going to switch from a really popular site (because simply being the largest community gives it network advantages and more diversity, more ideas, more everything that's a draw) without a significant reason to.

What the comment sorting system needs to do is not just highlight comments that the user agrees with, but, rather, ones that interest the user. I think a successful implementation has to recognize that users follow other users for different reasons: some for the links they share, the comments they make, sometimes because their interests completely align, and sometimes because they make controversial or unusual, but high quality, comments.

A system that only bumps up the comments of people you follow a bit is probably going to be too simplistic- it might not work because it doesn't differentiate these motivations finely enough. Development of a significantly more robust recommender system would be required. It would be significantly more complicated, and harder to do, but would be the real competitive advantage hubski had towards making it a superior place to discover content, and effectively, the only real incentive to draw users away from established sites.

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I mean, hubski was built with this idea in mind anyway, otherwise why do we even have a "following users" feature? It's founding idea on some level had to have been that content aggregation can be made better by better personalizing it, by better utilizing a user's evaluation of other users when we choose to implicitly vouch for the content they bring by following them.





mk  ·  4026 days ago  ·  link  ·  

These are good points. That's one reason why I think Kafke's idea below is particularly interesting. It applies the appointed curation mechanism to comments, which is a recommender system of sorts. You don't select the people who's comments are featured, but you appoint them to select the best for you. It is also significantly different than chatter in that regard.

It's something that I would be interested in testing.