So this is my very personal impression. I might be super wrong about this, that’s why I asked this question. Also, I remember liking the main EA facebook group quite a bit in the past, so maybe I just can’t properly relate to how useful the group is for people that are newer to EA thinking.
Currently, I avoid reading the EA facebook group the same way I avoid reading comments under youtube videos. Reading the group makes me angry and sad because of the ignorance and aggression displayed in the posts and especially in the comments. I think many comments do not meet the bar for intellectual quality or epistemic standards that we should have EA associated with. That’s really no surprise, online discourse is not particularly known for high quality.
Overall, I feel like the main EA facebook group doesn’t shine a great light on the EA movement. I haven’t thought much about this, but I think I would prefer stronger moderation for quality.
I agree that the main EA Facebook group has many low quality comments which “do not meet the bar for intellectual quality or epistemic standards that we should have EA associated with.” That said, it seems that one of the main reasons for this is that the Facebook group contains many more people with very low or tangential involvement with EA. I think we should be pretty cautious about more heavily moderating or trying to exclude the contributions of newer or less involved members
As an illustration: the 2018 EA Survey found >50% of respondents were members of the Facebook group, but only 20% (i.e. 1 in 5) were members of the Forum. Clearly the Facebook group has many more users who are even less engaged with EA, who don’t take the EA Survey. The forthcoming 2019 results were fairly similar.
At the moment I think the EA Facebook group plays a fairly important role alongside the EA Forum (which only a small minority of EAs are involved with) in giving people newer to the community somewhere where they can express their views. Higher moderation of comments would probably add to the pervasive (we will discuss this in a future EA Survey post) sense that EA is exclusive and elitist.
I do think it’s worth considering whether low quality discussion on the EA Facebook group will cause promising prospective EAs to ‘bounce’ i.e. see the low quality discussion, infer that EA is low quality and leave. The extent to which this happens is a tricky broader question, but I’m inclined to hope that it wouldn’t be too frequent since readers can easily see the higher quality articles and numerous Forum posts linked on Facebook and I would also hope that most readers will know that online discussion on Facebook is often low quality and not update too heavily against EA on the basis of it.
It also seems worth bearing in mind that since most members of the Facebook group clearly don’t make the decision to move over to participating in the EA Forum, that efforts to make the EA Facebook discussion more like the Forum, may just put off a large number of users.
This has been the case for quite a while now. There was a small discussion back in December 2016 where some people expressed similar opinions. My guess is that 2015 is the last year the group regularly had interesting posts, but I might be remembering incorrectly.
I think that’s one of the common ways for a post to be interesting, but there are other ways (e.g. asking a question that generates interesting discussion in the comments).
You may be missing a lot of good comments on YouTube videos (at least, if you watch entertaining content that gets a lot of upvotes). Now that comments are filtered by a sort of “magic algorithm” (which I assume is similar to the Forum’s—recency and upvotes), top comments on positive/entertaining videos are regularly very funny and occasionally provide interesting background context.
That said, I can’t speak to intellectual content, and I’m sure that “controversial content” comments are still terrible, because they lead to more upvoting of negative content that one side or the other wants to support.
So this is my very personal impression. I might be super wrong about this, that’s why I asked this question. Also, I remember liking the main EA facebook group quite a bit in the past, so maybe I just can’t properly relate to how useful the group is for people that are newer to EA thinking.
Currently, I avoid reading the EA facebook group the same way I avoid reading comments under youtube videos. Reading the group makes me angry and sad because of the ignorance and aggression displayed in the posts and especially in the comments. I think many comments do not meet the bar for intellectual quality or epistemic standards that we should have EA associated with. That’s really no surprise, online discourse is not particularly known for high quality.
Overall, I feel like the main EA facebook group doesn’t shine a great light on the EA movement. I haven’t thought much about this, but I think I would prefer stronger moderation for quality.
I agree that the main EA Facebook group has many low quality comments which “do not meet the bar for intellectual quality or epistemic standards that we should have EA associated with.” That said, it seems that one of the main reasons for this is that the Facebook group contains many more people with very low or tangential involvement with EA. I think we should be pretty cautious about more heavily moderating or trying to exclude the contributions of newer or less involved members
As an illustration: the 2018 EA Survey found >50% of respondents were members of the Facebook group, but only 20% (i.e. 1 in 5) were members of the Forum. Clearly the Facebook group has many more users who are even less engaged with EA, who don’t take the EA Survey. The forthcoming 2019 results were fairly similar.
At the moment I think the EA Facebook group plays a fairly important role alongside the EA Forum (which only a small minority of EAs are involved with) in giving people newer to the community somewhere where they can express their views. Higher moderation of comments would probably add to the pervasive (we will discuss this in a future EA Survey post) sense that EA is exclusive and elitist.
I do think it’s worth considering whether low quality discussion on the EA Facebook group will cause promising prospective EAs to ‘bounce’ i.e. see the low quality discussion, infer that EA is low quality and leave. The extent to which this happens is a tricky broader question, but I’m inclined to hope that it wouldn’t be too frequent since readers can easily see the higher quality articles and numerous Forum posts linked on Facebook and I would also hope that most readers will know that online discussion on Facebook is often low quality and not update too heavily against EA on the basis of it.
It also seems worth bearing in mind that since most members of the Facebook group clearly don’t make the decision to move over to participating in the EA Forum, that efforts to make the EA Facebook discussion more like the Forum, may just put off a large number of users.
This has been the case for quite a while now. There was a small discussion back in December 2016 where some people expressed similar opinions. My guess is that 2015 is the last year the group regularly had interesting posts, but I might be remembering incorrectly.
By “interesting posts”, do you mean original writing that hasn’t been posted elsewhere first?
I think that’s one of the common ways for a post to be interesting, but there are other ways (e.g. asking a question that generates interesting discussion in the comments).
Do you have the same feeling about comments on the EA Forum?
No
You may be missing a lot of good comments on YouTube videos (at least, if you watch entertaining content that gets a lot of upvotes). Now that comments are filtered by a sort of “magic algorithm” (which I assume is similar to the Forum’s—recency and upvotes), top comments on positive/entertaining videos are regularly very funny and occasionally provide interesting background context.
That said, I can’t speak to intellectual content, and I’m sure that “controversial content” comments are still terrible, because they lead to more upvoting of negative content that one side or the other wants to support.