This is getting a tad meta, and yes, I'm kvetching (it's Thursday after all). But these two posts contain two things I really dislike about discourse on the internet (another way of saying things that lead to internet discourse being less than ideal). One of them being sweeping generalizations in the first post, and the other being blanket statements such as "I disagree" or "not true".
The first post could have easily been tailored toward the more seedy part of U-Tube, whether those might be conspiracy theories being spewed, "influencers" peddling their worthless at best (and predatory at worst) wares, or videos whose only draw are scantily clothed women, the latter having a tendency to creep far up search results for many queries. When I want to see if there are videos of Puck Pieterse hopping barriers, somehow the first result under the "People also Watched" section falls into that third category, with no relevance to cyclocross. Afterwards, there are CX race footages, but that one video just somehow had to make its way really far up the results. Fortunately, the one video I did want to see (showing Pieterse hopping up a natural staircase of tree roots, and IIRC, filmed by @
jstonebarger) is the top result.
Having said that, while the second post is logically sound (in the sense that negation is valid even if only a small subset is being contradicted), "I disagree" just comes across as jarring and overly argumentative. I really dislike the rhetorical positioning of "I disagree", because implicit in that statement is that the one saying disagree is disagreeing with the general thrust of the message, and not just a small portion thereof. I think given the general context of how shyte the YouTube search results are (I'm using YouTube+ to skip the ads, and the results seem a lot worse when I'm signed out), a reasonable person would readily deduce that the first post is directed to the more seedy side of YouTube, and even @
Saab2000 recognizes that "there's a lot of junk on YT" (his own words).
So, a plea to the forum at large (and a reminder to myself), please use more care in your posts.
As for myself, I'd have never been able to swap the filters in my car without videos on youtube. The alternative would be paying someone $100 in labor charges.
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