There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

muntedcrocodile ,
@muntedcrocodile@lemm.ee avatar

Youtube u gotta get the widest set of opinions possible. Unfortunatly peertube just lacks content.

linucs OP ,

I repeat what I said to the other commenter: how do you find actual good and trustable channels on a specific topic?

Carrolade ,

Go with people who are willing to use their real name, a lot of times it’ll be in the channel description, or sometimes in a channel trailer or intro video. Sometimes in an interview some other outlet/creator has done on the content creator. Then google that real name and check their work history and education credentials. You can usually find a LinkedIn. If they’re a proper academic, their university will usually have a brief page on them on the official university website. If they’re an alumni, they can sometimes be found in an alumni list, various class lists, or publicly accessible projects they worked on, though not always. Work history often cannot be as easily verified, but sometimes can be if you dig a little. Depends on field.

It’s not too different from what you’d do if you wanted to hire someone to work for you in a small business or something.

Once you have a significant knowledge base yourself, you can start to use the sniff test, though that’s always far from perfect. Less time consuming though.

fjordbasa ,

I highly disagree with looking for the widest set of opinions. Some opinions are stupid and/or baseless and just muddy the conversation (that’s part of how you get screaming talking heads on cable news shows).

Personally I look for those with expertise who speak to their expertise. Just because someone has an advanced degree in one field does not mean their opinions in other fields are worth listening to. Also, I do a gut check. If is smells like BS, such as unfounded blanket statements or it seems like they’re pushing/selling something, I look into their qualifications a bit more or find someone else.

muntedcrocodile ,
@muntedcrocodile@lemm.ee avatar

You can learn a lot from the stupid baseless opinions. Learning what they are omitting what they are lieing about what they are pushing.

oxjox ,
@oxjox@lemmy.ml avatar

Finding a trustworthy source is the hardest part. I generally avoid anyone speaking too loudly of the subject. Someone who’s knowledgeable and confident, most times, can present calmly with context that’s accessible to most people.

Neil deGrasse Tyson is a good example. He’s a good place to start for a broad range of topics. Then if I want more details I can dig deeper on my own. A lot of times, his commentary requires digging deeper because he speaks too broadly.

I always check the source of a report or article; if there is no source, I don’t trust it. The source is usually a good place to ‘bookmark’ for further research.

Vampire ,
@Vampire@hexbear.net avatar

Trying to learn from ‘youtubers’ seems like asking for trouble.

Lectures posted on youtube etc. are different I suppose.

muntedcrocodile ,
@muntedcrocodile@lemm.ee avatar

Well u need to know enough about sonthing before you cant tell if your being bullshit or not. Generally i just try get every single perspective i can and make my own decision. I assume everyone has a slant but by watching everyone u can cancel that out.

Vampire ,
@Vampire@hexbear.net avatar

for what kind of topics?

OhmsLawn ,

The same way as topics in my field of expertise, of course.

YouTube.

linucs OP ,

Follow up question: how do you find actual good and trustable channels on a specific topic?

OhmsLawn ,

I’m going to think about that and get back to you. I think it’s mostly intuitive, based on many years of experience, but I’m not sure at this point.

I also have to mention that I was half joking. I don’t use YT all that much for my profession. I would, but it’s just not entirely relevant.

Muun ,

Youtube comments can be strangely helpful here, sometimes. If there’s a lot of “akshually” comments on every video, it may be a sign the youtuber is full of it. Not always true, but anything helps. Can also look up the youtuber’s credentials as well.

wewbull ,

You know that channels can curate which comments they have visible on their videos? Mostly this is used to silence hateful comments, but it’s just as easily abused to remove all differing points of view.

If all the comments agree, you’re probably in a curated bubble.

Vampire ,
@Vampire@hexbear.net avatar

sci-hub and annas-archive

I want to be less reliant on Wikipedia and Google Scholar, but in truth I still use them a lot

linucs OP ,

So you directly read papers on those topics? I tried doing that but I feel it requires a huge amount of background

Cheradenine ,

I am not the person you are replying to.

I read a lot of papers and it is hard if you don’t have background knowledge of the subject. If it’s something I am really interested in, then I will dive deep, if it’s not I will probably let it go when I get to the point where I no longer grasp what’s being said.

explore_broaden ,

Why do you want to be less reliant on Wikipedia?

lemann ,

Curious about this one too

sunzu ,
  1. Centralize anything and it will be ruined bubthe regime
  2. Wiki is already under a lot of pressure as is due to be as central as it is. There were rumors of them being under US Security service supervision so how good can it really be and where is it going to go now
  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines