Eliezer's rule is the real rule: the division is just about quality, as measured by voting.
But it is a difference whether an automatism makes this decision based on votes or whether a human pulls the trigger.
You might ask how closely voting follows the bullet points, but the point is just to predict the votes.
The current mechanics forces you to consider the implied rules to 'predict the votes'. And the implied rules seem a lot like what Yvain wrote. Maybe not as a hard border but as a more is better with a subjectively perceived threshold.
Another difference is that being moved away from Main when you were so bold to post there gives strong negative feedback.
On the other hand I haven't seen any Discussion post being promoted to Main since I am here (Sepember).
That doesn't mean that I disagree with the rules. I like the quality it ensures in Main.
I wonder how many subscribe to Main and not to Discussion. Maybe a question for a survey.
shrug I subscribe to Main and not Discussion, but that's in part because I only subscribe to things that don't generate more content than I can read or a large proportion of content that I'm not interested in. So Main posts come to me automatically, and then I usually check Discussion manually and just pick out the more interesting-sounding threads
Near the beginning of this year Wei Dai asked why certain people don't post to LessWrong more often, and Yvain replied that:
But Kaj disagreed that this was the actual standard:
This raises two questions: what is the real standard, and what should the standard be?
Because on the one hand, it's not clear Yvain is right, but on the other hand if he is right on the factual question, that standard seems way too high to me. It would suggest that, as John Maxwell says in the same thread, "The overwhelming LW moderation focus seems to be on stifling bad content. There's very little in place to encourage good content."
The wiki sort-of answers the factual question:
But this isn't an entirely unambiguous answer: how many of the five "factors" does a post need to be in Main? Furthermore, it often seems that the "real" rules are significantly different than what the wiki says. Yvain's perception may be incorrect, but I think there were reasons why he (and presumably the people who upvoted his comment) had that perception. Also, Eliezer recently explained that:
This makes me wonder what other poorly-publicized rules there are in this vicinity.
As for what the rules should be, I'm going to limit myself to two general suggestions:
Finally, whatever standard we settle on, I think it's really important that we make it clearer to people what it is. Aside from the obvious benefits of doing that, I've found that trying to navigate the unclear Main/Discussion distinction is itself often enough to make blogging at LessWrong feel like a chore.
Edited to add: In terms of karma I'm currently the top contributor for the past 30 days on LessWrong by a wide margin. I managed this in spite of the fact that I'm in the middle of doing App Academy and have no time (this past week has been an exception because vacation). I take this not as evidence of how awesome I am, but as evidence that way too little quality content is being posted in Main.