Looks like I lied or was wrong again.
I was thinking about how my mum doesn't watch anything I consider interesting. Part of the reason some people watch videos that aren't just entertainment is so they have more things to talk about with other people. Videos that explain things about the real world have more potential to help people to solve problems.
So I thought of the question, "Generally speaking, do you think that problems in the world are your responsibility?"
But this question is only interesting because of disagreement and misunderstandings. So a better question is this:
What percentage of people do you think would answer yes to this question: "Generally speaking, do you think that problems in the world are your responsibility?"
There's definitely some bias. People who think the question is important enough to answer, or important enough to share and therefore get more people to answer it, are people who think more than average. People who can't read won't even be on the platform on which it's asked. But it's still a question on which there might be a polar division in responses, instead of a normal-type distribution with a single peak.
The question is slightly ambiguous, by not saying "people on this platform". Some people might implicitly include that in the question and anticipate a bias for the platform. But if there is real disagreement about how people would answer the question, I think this wording can still detect it.
Somewhat similar to the poll in pt 44.
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Update 13 May 2026, 19:43
For the record, my guess is 20% would say yes.
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Update 13 May 2026, 21:47
Has nothing to do with the above, but by making it an update I can pretend that I'm not saying it, because it doesn't reduce the visibility of the poll suggestion.
A movie review site where all reviewers are required to answer the following two questions about everything they review, as checkboxes:
1) People who like this show are dumb
2) Dumb people will like this show
The use of "dumb" to imprecisely mean "stupid" is deliberate. Because people can criticize this meaning, it vaguely suggests that the person using it could be stupid. This can make an insult more insulting: if a stupid person thinks you're stupid, many people think it means you really must be stupid. But it can also serve as a hidden element of like facetiousness. With these questions, someone could check the box for #2, while leaving #1 unchecked. #1 could be seen as recommending that people not watch the show, while #2 could be seen as recommending that certain viewers should watch the show. What would it mean if both boxes are unchecked, but a review still says that a show is not worth watching?
— The example of #1 that I was thinking about was "we've seen this show a million times before", implying that people who don't recognize the story are ignorant i.e. dumb. No one wants to look dumb. But if that's what a reviewer is implying, why not make it explicit, with the checkboxes?
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Update 13 May 2026, 23:02
Note that a review site that asks those questions would be hard to implement right now. People are too sensitive to being described as 'dumb', or of acting in a way that seems to discriminate between smart and dumb people at all, due to their fear of igniting a war between them. This is because of their awareness of the hidden problem.
No one created the poll I suggested about problems that affect stupid people. Maybe no one was interested in creating a poll that I described no matter what the topic was, because I could have used it as evidence that they knew of this idea. Or maybe there could have been someone who might have been willing to create a poll, but not that poll, because they were afraid that most people would say No to that poll (leading to a division, just like those questions on a review site could). The red and blue buttons questions could be seen as testing sort of the same thing: lots of people explained their choice of the blue button as that "some people would press the blue button, so every good person should push it." Basically, "you should help people even if they're stupid", and the majority of people chose this button, in the original scenario where it didn't require climbing a 300-meter hill to reach it.
But that's not the reason for this update. In the unpublished pt 80, I mentioned the spammy emails I got in 2014 or whatever, which eventually stopped after I stopped going online for a long enough time that emails could potentially have been deleted from my spam folder before I could rescue them.
Suppose that this happened: Mei was responsible for the emails. Mei somehow knew that I was no longer saving them, and felt that she no longer had to send them. Due to her inability to interact with me, she became interested in someone else and started a relationship with them. Even though her starting college at age 13 or 14, as well as her getting Rank 14 on a rogue though world PvP in WoW, suggests that she's smart, and she took kendo (Japanese swordsmanship) and was apparently not injured when the dog that killed her cat also attacked her, she could have ended up in a relationship with someone who harmed her and eventually killed her.
Even though this possibility exists, I don't regret not going online long enough to have possibly caused the cessation of the spammy emails I got. If Mei still cares about me, it doesn't benefit me in any way. The moral standard that I suggested in 2012 was that it's immoral to benefit from association with someone who hasn't shared this idea, and I have no reason to think that Mei shared it, so if I don't benefit from anything she does, it's consistent with the moral standard. Better if she was in a relationship with someone else. Since I don't know anything about her life, and have no way to ascertain her real-life identity (her last name), it's reasonable for me to assume that it's also possible she hasn't been in a relationship with anyone else, but I won't know unless people use this idea. To the extent that a romantic attachment could deter attachments to other people, as suggested by the song used in World of Warcraft- Here Without You that I've linked before (where is superscaling resolution, YouTube?! Is it not enabled by default for inactive accounts or is it just not being used for most videos on the platform?), this uncertainty becomes a cost to me. I note that in the series Futmalls, other characters seem to view a male character more positively when they see that he doesn't want to continue living after his wife dies, but they still attempt to save his life even if it means taking unreasonable risks to do so.
I'm writing this because 13 minutes into a 43-minute video, I got the vp9 dropped segment bug on YouTube. I would be fine if I never got this bug again. If this bug is caused by deliberate interference, if it never happened again that could have a similar result to what I suggest could have happened after I stopped getting spammy emails.
If me writing this update to this post ends up harming me, then it's consistent with the moral standard that I suggested, of not benefiting from someone who hasn't shared this idea.