HACKER Q&A
📣 modinfo

Why is HN mega addictive?


Why is HN mega addictive?


  👤 toomuchtodo Accepted Answer ✓
1. The discussion quality is incredibly high because of dang, participants staying within the forum guidelines knowing mod operating model, and the general disposition of contributors. You can't act like a 4chan or average reddit participant long without getting nuked.

2. The content surfaced is on average interesting and satiating to a curious mind. There is both depth and breadth. Do you like politics? History? Deep technical studies? Science and medical research of all sorts? Take your pick (insert Bo Burnham "welcome to the Internet" here).

3. For those seeking that sort of opportunity, jobs are available with who's hiring threads, YC ads, and serendipitous job offers from HN interactions.

It's a virtual Soho House where membership is free and requires no referral but ongoing membership is up to how you behave.

(unapologetic HN addict)


👤 cercatrova
FYI you can set up noprocrast in your profile to make HN stop serving you requests after a set period of time, so you don't get too addicted.

👤 anon2020dot00
Same reason why Twitch chat is addictive because we are social creatures and it allows us to feel connected with other people.

But just like any addiction, there is diminishing returns to it and so it is likely best in small doses.

There is also the reward mechanism when finding a particular interesting tool or idea from the site such as recent launch of Github Co-pilot.


👤 ironmagma
High quality discussion, high signal-to-noise ratio. No ads, no sponsored content other than Y Combinator job postings.

👤 karmakaze
Besides the great content that's surfaced and comment threads, there is a negative addictive aspect. The ranking algorithm mixes older popular articles with new articles. This is a perfectly reasonable way to give new posts exposure, but is a terrible way to consume it. Every time we revisit HN during the day we see a number of titles that we'd seen before. Then every once in a while we find a new gem that's either new, or missed a previous time, jackpot.

Since I check multiple times per day, I split posts by day and keywords to dramatically cut down on total visit time: hackerer.news


👤 gregjor
Wrong question. I think you meant to ask "Why can't I stop reading HN?"

I suspect very few people obsessively look at HN all day. The site doesn't have any inherently addictive quality, especially when compared to other social media platforms that actively try to steal time and attention. A few people might spend too much time scrolling through HN out of boredom or procrastination, they should ask themselves why they choose to do that rather than looking for something "addictive" about the site.


👤 night-rider
It’s only addicting if your into STEM and are a technologist of some sort. What’s not to like about a steady stream of tech and programming news to mull over? That said, it’s not all tech and some posts are just something to gratify intellectual curiosity. If you are addicted, take a break from it and come back to it when you’re able. You’ll enjoy it more I promise.

👤 wruza
“Addictive” brings a negative connotation, like pointless time/energy sink or unhealthy use, which HN is not. It’s just a great e-place in which I like to e-hang out.

👤 modinfo
Every day before I wake up, the first thing I check is HN since 2014.