> instead of users submitting a paywalled version of the article they could instead reference one that seems to not have this issue
People often do this when the site is known to have an impenetrable paywall, e.g., WSJ.
But the NYT's paywall is quite easy to bypass. It usually only appears if you've accessed more than the monthly limit's worth of articles, and after that you can just use a clean browser instance.
Bear in mind that the NYT is generally regarded as among the premier news sources in the world. (This is not to say that it's to my personal taste. It often isn't, but that's a separate issue.) But its articles, particularly those with an opiniative or analytical flavour, will often be preferred due to this brand perception that the NYT has built.
Where there is a better article on a topic, people can and do point to it here and encourage the moderators to update the URL.
But the HN community would never want a lower-quality article on a topic to be given preference due to it having no paywall. If that article is the best one on the topic, as long as the paywall can be bypassed, that is the article HN wants listed.
> People often do this when the site is known to have an impenetrable paywall, e.g., WSJ.
Not in my recent experience, which was my reason for this comment
> But the NYT's paywall is quite easy to bypass.
As I said before, why force cures on an issue instead of simply acting on preventative measures in the first instance?
More to the point, how would someone bypass this if they used an app for HN? There's no "private mode" in these and simply asking people to delete the apps cache every time they hit this problem is again a cure not a preventative measure.
> Bear in mind that the NYT is generally regarded as among the premier news sources in the world.
> But the HN community would never want a lower-quality article on a topic to be given preference due to it having no paywall.
Discussing the relative "qualities" of news outlets is a discussion in and of itself, but as I also showed there is a Forbes article that echoes many of the same points. So I don't think this piece of analysis was unique to the NYT and is of such great stature that Forbes would be arbitrarily inferior to NYT?
Are you suggesting it's better for the community, even if some can't read the article, to post a paywalled one rather than one everybody can read? I thought the point was to share news for _everybody_ on here?
The problem is that you’re conflating two issues that should be separate: paywalls vs article/source quality.
The article posted on HN should be the best generally-accessible article on that topic, end of story. In this case, if the Forbes article is better, that's the one that should be here. If the NYT version is better, that's the one that should be here. If they're about on par with one another, then the first one to be posted and upvoted should remain, as nobody would want a norm in which the moderators unilaterally change a submission to a different source from what was originally submitted and upvoted by the community.
If it has a paywall, the only question is, is there a workaround that would allow anyone to access it. In the case of the NYT, the answer seems to be yes; you just need a browser instance that hasn't exceeded the NYT's monthly limit. I haven't heard anyone ever say it's impossible for them to access NYT content. Just sometimes inconvenient, if you need to open a different browser window. For me, if I'm on mobile, that might mean switching from my usual Chrome instance to Safari or Firefox. But I've never found a case where I can't access it. It's a little inconvenient, but it's OK. Other people have different standards of convenience. E.g., some people disable all Javascript and get annoyed that a site won't render for them. So you can never meet everyone's standards.
I totally understand that you're well-intentioned and are wanting to find a solution that is best for the broader HN community.
But please understand that those of us who have been on HN a long time (12 years in my case) have seen this topic thrashed out repeatedly (sometimes multiple times per week). We've all discussed an thought about it enough that we understand that the policy the HN mods have arrived at and written into the guidelines is a variant of the old adage: the worst form of government, except for all the others.
Other policies would lead to scenarios in which there are arguments amongst the community and mods over whether an arguably-slightly-less-good-but-non-paywalled version should be favored over an arguably-slightly-better-but-weakly-paywalled version. Or alternately, any sites with paywalls, even porous ones like NYT, should be banned altogether. None of these outcomes are clearly better than the one we have.
I know imperfect solutions are hard to stomach sometimes!
People often do this when the site is known to have an impenetrable paywall, e.g., WSJ.
But the NYT's paywall is quite easy to bypass. It usually only appears if you've accessed more than the monthly limit's worth of articles, and after that you can just use a clean browser instance.
Bear in mind that the NYT is generally regarded as among the premier news sources in the world. (This is not to say that it's to my personal taste. It often isn't, but that's a separate issue.) But its articles, particularly those with an opiniative or analytical flavour, will often be preferred due to this brand perception that the NYT has built.
Where there is a better article on a topic, people can and do point to it here and encourage the moderators to update the URL.
But the HN community would never want a lower-quality article on a topic to be given preference due to it having no paywall. If that article is the best one on the topic, as long as the paywall can be bypassed, that is the article HN wants listed.