I almost got banned from Hacker News

Hacker News frontpage - logged in as geerlingguy

I started submitting my blog posts to Hacker News around 2016, but only ones I thought relevant to the HN community.

Until 2020, I would do this about once a week, and most submissions would fall off /newest within an hour, never to be seen again. But a problem arose (well, 'problem' depends on your perspective 😉): over time, more of my posts started hitting HN's front page.

HN is an interesting community—unlike Reddit, on which most material considered 'self-promotion' is verboten (because so much is spammy resumé-boosting or corporate material), HN encourages genuine self-promotion (at least judging by what hits the front page).

I think that comes down the the more entrepreneurial community surrounding the site—most of us have pretty good BS filters for pitches, and can tell when someone is only trying to sell something.

Most HN links aren't submitted by the original author—but many are, which I tend to like. It feels like HN still has a real sense of online community (though I doubt I'll ever meet anyone I've conversed with on HN in real life—especially considering I live in 'flyover country').

A dang warning

Back to my story, though: earlier this year, I think a critical mass of users were bothered by the fact that (jeffgeerling.com) links posted by geerlingguy kept hitting the front page—one time I think two articles frontpage'd on the same day! Eventually, this resulted in an email from dang (HN's primary moderator) cautioning against 'spammy' behavior, and encouraging me to 'slow my roll' so-to-speak.

Not to toot my own horn, but I'm a decent writer. I tend to be honest and open in my writing, and cover topics popular with HN users. That's a potent combo for hitting the front page.

Because of that, plus the fact that I now have some 'fans' in the HN audience, many of my posts get enough upvotes to hit the bottom of the front page, at least. And some of the more interesting ones rise up to the top before their rank decays over the next few hours.

Prediction: This post will hit front page at some point, mostly because we HN users love nothing greater than navel-gazing and discussing our own little community :)

All that is to say, when you get an email from a site's main moderator1, you should probably take the words to heart. Which I did.

For the past few months, I limited submitting my own content to a couple times per month.

Heck, at this point, there are probably enough people following this blog's RSS that someone will post an article within a day or two if it's interesting enough. Maybe I should just make a rule to never post any of my own content now that I have enough (albeit small-time) notoriety?

But what about the ban?

Well, an interesting series of events played out over the past week, and it almost led to dang laying down the banhammer on my account—and I wanted to convey a bit of the story in hopes it can help people who don't get to frontpage on HN but want to, to know how to do it without risking the wrath of the HN community (and/or a permaban)!

Last week, I posted a video and blog post that complained of four issues I had with SpaceX's Starlink satellite Internet service. In the video itself, I even mentioned how discussing any Musk-related venture is—and I quote—"risky business."

That video quickly racked up more comments than any other video I've posted. The comments quickly separated into either "you are an entitled young white guy so stop whining" or "I totally agree that Starlink is evil and has no redeeming qualities" (I'm not even paraphrasing here...). Welcome to modern online discourse, I guess.

Anyways, with that backdrop, I also uploaded a video yesterday about running this website on a Raspberry Pi cluster on a farm. And in the video I mentioned I'm still hosting it over 4G (but at my home for now), and two risks are high data overage charges, and comments being a potential problem since they punch through my caching layer (and result in slower requests through the Pi's instances of Drupal and MariaDB).

I posted the story to HN, and within an hour it was rising up the front page. But it suddenly disappeared. Around the same time, I had a massive DDoS. At first I thought it was just a DoS and could be thwarted with some IP blocking... but then it got a lot more massive to the point I had to jump over to Cloudflare and limit all traffic to Cloudflare IPs—full story for another day.

Nginx requests before and during DDoS

Munin couldn't even catch up, but by my own log file reckoning, the VPS was handling at times over 4,000 requests per second, all punching through cache to my PHP/Drupal backend, and about 90% of the requests were erroring out.

It took an hour to figure out I wasn't going to be able to handle the new 2,000 requests per second average using Nginx and on-VPS firewall tricks. So I spent the next hour getting traffic routed through Cloudflare and putting a CDN-level block on all POST requests until the attack stopped.

After the mayhem resided (and I calculated about 350 Mbps of HTTP requests was hitting the server for over an hour), I got the following email from dang:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30273905 was heavily upvoted by a criminal spam service that steals accounts from HN users and then sells upvotes and comments using the stolen accounts. That's basically the equivalent of a capital offense on HN and we ban accounts and sites that do it.

Can you tell us about this?

Well, that's a fun message to read right after a DDoS attack...

There's no shortcut to success

I've heard of places like "upvote club" (there are dozens of such services), but I have never and will never pay for a like, follow, or anything like that. I think that's some of the lowest scummy behavior on the Internet, and I strongly agree it's a "capital offense" in any online community.

Fortunately for me, dang gave me a chance to plead my case.

I explained my situation, reiterated that I'd never do it, and also asked around to make sure nobody in any of the communities I'm in ordered the upvotes. Nobody said they did, so my current theory is it's possible someone wanted to take me down a rung (maybe relating to Starlink, maybe trying to hit my wallet by throwing a ton of data through my 4G connection?), and this was definitely a good way to try ruining my Wednesday.

Fortunately, dang was satisfied with my informal investigation (though I still have no leads on what exactly happened in either case), and did not lay down the banhammer.

But he and I had a conversation about the problem in general, and we both agreed it might be good to post my experience.

Unlike many other communities, HN is still relevant and moderated enough that spammy behavior is almost always caught and punished. And as someone who's had a number of posts organically hit HN's front page, I can give you the best advice for hitting the front page:

Write interesting, relevant content that the entrepreneurial community on Hacker News would like, and don't fill it with sales-y BS.

Also: most of your submissions will never make it to the front page.

Any kind of upvote ring (whether paid or an informal groups you ask to spam the upvote button on every post) will eventually get flagged, and often results in a ban.

There is no service—no matter how good their marketing sounds—that can push your post to the front page and keep it there. And for the tiny percentage that do stay, 99% of the time those posts wouldn't even need an illegal push!

Enough people read /newest that you should take no upvotes as a sign the content just wasn't as interesting as you thought. If you really want, wait a couple days and post it again (there's even a second chance pool for hand-picked links that get picked up in a manual review process). If your submission stays off a few times in a row, move on to the next thing. It's no use beating a dead horse.


1 dang is superhuman; I honestly have no idea how he and the rest of the tiny group (is it still just him and sctb?) that moderates HN keeps it a mostly civil place.

Comments

I would recommend against engaging with Hacker News. It's a terrible "community" with toxic "moderation" and a reputation to match. I get that as a content creator, you are reliant on exposure to make things worth doing. But in hardware it is even worse. Even a small project worth doing can take a lot of time, effort, and sometimes money. In this case, exposure on Hacker News often isn't a good thing.

For the rest of us, it's not "almost"; it's "actually". HN moderators are toxic and live in their own weird bubble that only they comprehend. They do worse things than ban users; they shadowban the user and also the user's IP for no _justifiable_ reason.

Surprised to hear you frequent hacker news. It makes Reddit look like the most stable and friendly community on the net.

Figuring out how to please dang (and letting his disapproval ruin Wednesdays from time to time) is a fool's errand I'll leave you to explore.

Not really. I was almost conned into the same situation. What I found was It's a dangerous thing to control. I had to enlist some help from the field. I finally tried it one last time and it worked. Good luck next time. Live free and keep it free.

Dang clearly shoots first and only just manages to ask questions later - 5 minutes reading your blog, website, background, resume and watching a few of your videos should have made this a non-event - maybe even an apology because (s)he hasn't got his own house in order by blocking the flood of upvotes that should be easily detectable.

I dunno why there are so many comments here so negative about HN. My experience has *mostly* been positive. I'm sorry to hear about your DDOS situation, Jeff.

It seems to me that most people don't fully appreciate the time and effort the moderators put in to a website out of which (as far as I know) they are making no money. There are false positives and that is unfortunate, but they really don't have the resources to be super nice to everyone.

Hacker News is owned by Y Combinator, a venture capital firm. The only publicly known moderator is employed by them. It's not a community site.

Its just a matter of time, they've got fundamental problems they won't ever solve if they continue business as usual.

Its also not a place you can openly discuss things, and there is a subtle danger in that because they deceitfully market it towards being open when they aren't. You also have to be vary wary that what you see may not actually be true, distorting reflected appraisal happens quite often on that platform in a sybil attack type fashion, you have to be careful as this is a psychological blindspot everyone has, its very subtle.

Be warned, most of these so called hackers are imposters, Iíve been ripped off 4 times already, thankfully my friend gave me a reliable contact, he works with discretion and delivers, he does all sorts of hacks, I would prefer to let his services speak for itself, you can contact him email....  wizcyber on Wickr or (might have to download wicker app) , if he asks where you got his contact you can say from Lisa.

As others have mentioned, HN is a very toxic community. To elaborate on the way he keeps it civil is by having open ended rules that no one can follow preventatively, so he can just flag or ban anyone that supposedly breaks his rules based on his arbitrary judgement. The rules appear intentionally inconsistent, I've brought the issue up to him on two different occasions and he's chosen to make no changes, which is a choice itself.

He bans anyone that breaks those rules after a few warnings, and one of those rules, the eschew flame bait, isn't defined; and can be applied to just about any post, even when calling out false statements as being false, so you can't even really do that. I won't get into the specific reasons why that's bad other than to say the only benefit in that structure is if you want to indoctrinate or brainwash people as China had done historically during the Korean war with prisoner PoWs. (Sapir-Whorf, Distorted Reflected Appraisal, Isolation)

Since you won't know when its applied because its on a case-by-case basis, any response you potentially make can and will get you banned.

I just recently got a warning for responding to a guy who made false statements, making it clear what they said was false, and included information that was history backed about why it was false. I flagged them, no flag actually happened until hours later.

I got a warning to not do it again. Dang called it ideological when it was not, it was correcting false statements made about a subject which was not normative. I did what he himself told me was the accepted way to handle these issues because they won't moderate it. That is the state of HN. Its clearly not a place for real discussion, and dang has no credibility.

He has proven that what he has said is a lie, so he's lost all credibility, and his site has ongoing sybil type-attacks aimed at propaganda and other harmful efforts. If you are on their platform long enough you will see it too.

Email where Dang explains how and what they moderate with private information masked. This in the context of a person who was promoting eating lead as being nutritious with several different accounts promoting the user in question.

https://pastebin.com/wMai9Txa

When reporting propaganda and vote manipulation, his response is its not happening, and that you just need to follow the community rules which can't be followed, because they change all the time. Personally, I find him very deceitful in his actions.

Dang is a power tripping asshole, who has an agenda.
For instance anything against LGBT or American World Domination is getting deleted/banned.
Even if the person was attacked by LGBT or someone being from the US > all faction.