That said, Iâm seeing a particular kind of bad post pop up much more frequently on Medium in the past ~2 years than previously: the shortâŚ
I agree that âFor Youâ used to have a much better signal to noise ratio. Iâm tempted to blame the increased size of Mediumâs user base â after all, with a small user base itâs a lot easier to tweak the algorithm for good results, a small sample set is a good enough proxy for recommendation quality, and few people are going to be trying to game the system, while all of those things grow worse at at least a geometric rate as the number of users grows.
That said, Iâm seeing a particular kind of bad post pop up much more frequently on Medium in the past ~2 years than previously: the short post that should be much shorter. I see a lot of medium posts that are two paragraphs long, making a point that would be clearer as a tweet, along with a couple huge and irrelevant images and somebodyâs affiliate link.
I used to see these mostly as HN links (since I browse HNâs ânewestâ), and chalked it up to the culture of shallow self-promotion thatâs all too common on HN (combined with the fact that, like Blogger a decade ago, Medium provides people who have no technical skills with a free blog that looks relatively professional). Because I rarely interact with such posts other than viewing them, I doubt that my feed is full of them due to this early exposure; instead, I suspect that this behavior has become normalized â itâs now expected to post âone minute readsâ that are actually ten second reads, and my darling âtwenty minute readsâ and âeighty minute readsâ are seen as bad for business, creating a low view to read ratio â nevermind the fact that there arenât any ads on Medium (other than native ones) so impression metrics donât really matter.
Another possible source is following people who have lower standards for recommendations than I do. Such people may typically write nice, long, well- considered posts, but yet recommend all the crap they agree with, whether or not itâs worth reading. Medium doesnât distinguish between following somebody for their posts and following them for their recommendations.
By John Ohno on October 3, 2016.
[Canonical link](https://medium.com/@enkiv2/i-agree-that-for-you-used-to-have- a-much-better-signal-to-noise-ratio-147996a6ded4)
Exported from Medium on September 18, 2020.