The direct consequence is reducing the net quality of content on EAforum, but it also allows it to steer people towards events as they get more interested in various EA topics, where they can talk more freely without worrying about saying things controversial, or get involved directly with people working on those areas via face-to-face interaction. And it doesn’t stop EAforum from remaining a great bulletin board for orgs to publish papers and updates and get feedback.
But at first glance, catering towards marginal users normally makes you think that they’re just trying to do classic user retention. That’s not what’s happening; this is not a normal forum and that’s the wrong way to think about it.
Yeah, a lot of them are not openly advertised for good reasons. One example that’s probably fine to talk about is NunoSempere’s claim that EAforum is shifting towards catering to new or marginal users.
The direct consequence is reducing the net quality of content on EAforum, but it also allows it to steer people towards events as they get more interested in various EA topics, where they can talk more freely without worrying about saying things controversial, or get involved directly with people working on those areas via face-to-face interaction. And it doesn’t stop EAforum from remaining a great bulletin board for orgs to publish papers and updates and get feedback.
But at first glance, catering towards marginal users normally makes you think that they’re just trying to do classic user retention. That’s not what’s happening; this is not a normal forum and that’s the wrong way to think about it.