Ben, Kat, Emerson, and readers of the original post have all noticed that the nature of Ben’s process leads to selection against positive observations about Nonlinear. I encourage readers to notice that the reverse might also be true. Examples of selection against negative information include:
Ben has reason to exclude stories that are less objective or have a less strong evidence base. The above comment is a concrete example of this.
There’s also something related here about the supposed unreliability of Alice as a source: Ben needs to include this to give a complete picture/because other people (in particular the Nonlinear co-founders) have said this. I strongly concur with Ben when he writes that he “found Alice very willing and ready to share primary sources [...] so I don’t believe her to be acting in bad faith.” Personally, my impression is that people are making an incorrect inference about Alice from her characteristics (that are perhaps correlated with source-reliability in a large population, but aren’t logically related, and aren’t relevant in this case).
To the extent that you expect other people to have been silenced (e.g. via anticipated retaliation), you might expect not to hear relevant information from them.
To the extent that you expect Alice and Chloe to have had burnout-style experiences, you might expect not to read clarifications on or news about negative experiences.
Until this post came out, this was true of ~everything in the post.
There is a reason the post was published 1.5 years after the relevant events took place—people involved in the events really do not want to spend further mental effort on this.
Thank you very much for sharing, Chloe.
Ben, Kat, Emerson, and readers of the original post have all noticed that the nature of Ben’s process leads to selection against positive observations about Nonlinear. I encourage readers to notice that the reverse might also be true. Examples of selection against negative information include:
Ben has reason to exclude stories that are less objective or have a less strong evidence base. The above comment is a concrete example of this.
There’s also something related here about the supposed unreliability of Alice as a source: Ben needs to include this to give a complete picture/because other people (in particular the Nonlinear co-founders) have said this. I strongly concur with Ben when he writes that he “found Alice very willing and ready to share primary sources [...] so I don’t believe her to be acting in bad faith.” Personally, my impression is that people are making an incorrect inference about Alice from her characteristics (that are perhaps correlated with source-reliability in a large population, but aren’t logically related, and aren’t relevant in this case).
To the extent that you expect other people to have been silenced (e.g. via anticipated retaliation), you might expect not to hear relevant information from them.
To the extent that you expect Alice and Chloe to have had burnout-style experiences, you might expect not to read clarifications on or news about negative experiences.
Until this post came out, this was true of ~everything in the post.
There is a reason the post was published 1.5 years after the relevant events took place—people involved in the events really do not want to spend further mental effort on this.