How Do Comments Work on HackerNoon?
Anyone can comment on HackerNoon. All comments are reviewed by the individual writer or staff editor before publication on the story page. We hope this moderation approach will encourage high quality discussion about technology or whatever it is that is driving our collective futures.
This publishing approach does ask for something from you – that in today’s overloaded internet, you rarely get asked for – patience. There is a second human on the other side of the screen and she or he or they will read and review your human words. IMHO internet comments too often favor instant gratification instead of thoughtfulness about how to help the next visitor.
David Smooke
Founder & CEO of HackerNoon. Grew up on the east coast. Grew old on the west coast. Now, cooking in Colorado.
Pictured story, https://hackernoon.com/the-joy-of-using-single-purpose-tech
Anyone can comment on HackerNoon! All comments are reviewed by the individual writer or staff editor before publication on the story page. We hope this moderation approach will encourage high-quality human discussions about technology or whatever it is that is driving our collective futures.
This publishing approach does ask for something from you – that in today’s overloaded internet, you rarely get asked for – patience. There is a second human on the other side of the screen and she or he or they will read and review your human words. IMHO internet comments too often favor bots and/or instant gratification instead of thoughtfulness about how to help the next visitor.
At HackerNoon, we’ve learned a lot in publishing tens of thousands of stories and have tried a number of different commenting systems (discourse / medium / disqus / gun)… Naturally, we reached the conclusion to start over with one that is more native to our core product, the content management system that powers HackerNoon. The text editor itself is the 3.0 text editor build with outline open source – it’s a clean typing experience with a few extras like bullet points, breakout quotes, and code blocks.
This is HackerNoon’s first native story commenting system, we are very open to comments below about how it could work.
Sidenote: if you think all this second human rule quality curation is bullshit, or just think you have a story/AMA/real-time-words-craving – anyone can instantaneously comment on your story if you toggle YES to Townhall Mode in your story settings.
Right now (in QA), writers can review submitted and published comments on their stories here and manage comments settings here. All HackerNoon accounts can find their published comments on their profile pages.
So what do you say – how should our internet comments work tomorrow?
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Anyone can comment on HackerNoon. All comments are reviewed by the individual writer or staff editor before publication on the story page. We hope this moderation approach will encourage high quality discussion about technology or whatever it is that is driving our collective futures.
This publishing approach does ask for something from you – that in today’s overloaded internet, you rarely get asked for – patience. There is a second human on the other side of the screen and she or he or they will read and review your human words. IMHO internet comments too often favor instant gratification instead of thoughtfulness about how to help the next visitor.
David Smooke
Founder & CEO of HackerNoon. Grew up on the east coast. Grew old on the west coast. Now, cooking in Colorado.
Pictured story, https://hackernoon.com/the-joy-of-using-single-purpose-tech
Anyone can comment on HackerNoon! All comments are reviewed by the individual writer or staff editor before publication on the story page. We hope this moderation approach will encourage high-quality human discussions about technology or whatever it is that is driving our collective futures.
This publishing approach does ask for something from you – that in today’s overloaded internet, you rarely get asked for – patience. There is a second human on the other side of the screen and she or he or they will read and review your human words. IMHO internet comments too often favor bots and/or instant gratification instead of thoughtfulness about how to help the next visitor.
At HackerNoon, we’ve learned a lot in publishing tens of thousands of stories and have tried a number of different commenting systems (discourse / medium / disqus / gun)… Naturally, we reached the conclusion to start over with one that is more native to our core product, the content management system that powers HackerNoon. The text editor itself is the 3.0 text editor build with outline open source – it’s a clean typing experience with a few extras like bullet points, breakout quotes, and code blocks.
This is HackerNoon’s first native story commenting system, we are very open to comments below about how it could work.
Sidenote: if you think all this second human rule quality curation is bullshit, or just think you have a story/AMA/real-time-words-craving – anyone can instantaneously comment on your story if you toggle YES to Townhall Mode in your story settings.
Right now (in QA), writers can review submitted and published comments on their stories here and manage comments settings here. All HackerNoon accounts can find their published comments on their profile pages.
So what do you say – how should our internet comments work tomorrow?