One issue that has been discussed here before is whether Less Wrong is causing readers and participants to behave more rationally or is primarily a time-sink. I recently encountered an example that seemed worth pointing out to the community that suggested mixed results. The entry for Less Wrong on RationalkWiki says " In the outside world, the ugly manifests itself as LessWrong acolytes, minds freshly blown, metastasising to other sites, bringing the Good News for Modern Rationalists, without clearing their local jargon cache." RationalWiki has a variety of issues that I'm not going to discuss in detail here (such as a healthy of dose of motivated cognition pervading the entire project and having serious mind-killing problems) but this sentence should be a cause for concern. What they are essentially talking about is LWians not realizing (or not internalizing) that there's a serious problem of inferential distance between people who are familiar with many of the ideas here and people who are not. Since inferential distance is an issue that has been discussed here a lot, this suggests that some people who have read a lot here are not applying the lessons even when they are consciously talking about material related to those lessons. Of course, there's no easy way to tell how representative a sample this is, how common it is, and given RW's inclination to list every possible thing they don't like about something, no matter how small, this may not be a serious issue at all. But it did seem to be serious enough to point out here.
As late as 2004, people were still working out how to write an encyclopedia from first principles. There was not sufficient popularity to provide feedback as to how Wikipedia was doing in terms of usefulness to ordinary people, and how, or even whether, this would be widely useful. People were still thinking in terms of using the website as raw material for a finished product, and that finished product would be the real point.
Around 2005 it hit the twenties in Alexa and my phone started ringing a lot ...
Now? I see advertisements in Tube stations advertising something as "THE WIKIPEDIA OF ..." I forget what it was. But this was a poster on the wall of a subway station advertising to the general populace. How did we get here?
And the key point is that Wikipedia didn't have any particular outside feedback until it was already famous. Probably the first bit that really brought home that there was a real world out there was the Siegenthaler incident. Until then I think we really were flying more or less blind, while even internally the quality control was based on theoretical considerations of what an encyclopedia might look like, rather than anything the end readers were actually using it for or its effects in the world.
I'm not sure it's actually useful to compare Wikipedia's trajectory to LessWrong, I'm more wondering if there's comparable ideas based on LessWrong having almost no outside feedback. RationalWiki really doesn't count. We're idiots (though eloquent ones) writing for our own amusement. But it will be interesting to see the effect of the Harry Potter fans coming in.
Has anyone compiled a timeline of LessWrong as yet?
But what should that outside feedback have looked like? P... (read more)