Comment by Kirby64
9 hours ago
> When I'm looking for a dining establishment, what I care about are simple facts: where is it, what are the hours, what's the menu, is there a dress code, are there fees in addition to the listed prices.
You don’t care about the intangibles, or things that may be unsavory that a business owner would want to hide? If the waitstaff are consistently rude or horrible in some way, that wouldn’t be put in a website (besides those places where that is the schtick).
> The kinds of subjective assessments you'd typically see in a review such as "I liked (or didn't like) the service" or "the establishment was gross" are ultimately meaningless. They're written by randos with values and expectations that may not necessarily align with mine, so it's a waste of time trying to parse that out. And that's assuming an environment of honest reviews written in good faith, which isn't a realistic assumption.
Just because your values and expectations don’t align with every rando, doesn’t mean you can’t get signaling cues from reviews. It’s just like product reviews: if most people consistently complain about a specific thing, it probably has some flaw or problem. Praise and general 5 star flattery is less useful, especially in review gamification though.
No comments yet
Contribute on Hacker News ↗