• @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    I didn’t open the link. I opened the Lemmy post to figure out what the clickbait was about, but since it didn’t illuminate that I didn’t click on the link.

    I think that’s reasonable to do, especially inside of Lemmy.

    • @Anonymouse
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      131 year ago

      It sounds like you’re encouraging the poster to include a brief summary of the article vs duplicating the title in the summary. Something like,

      The [American] Consumer Finance Protection Bureau … has proposed new rules limiting the trade between brokers and bureaux, under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, putting strict restrictions on the transfer of information between the two.

      • @[email protected]
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        71 year ago

        Yes! Exactly. Very well put.

        Providing proper context to helps us make decisions about what data we consume. Clickbait is the opposite, it’s engineered to make you interested, but not satisfy the TLDR.

        • @Anonymouse
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          41 year ago

          I won’t click on a site if it has clickbaity headlines because I already know that it’s light fluffy stories with no meat. I happen to already subscribe to pluralsite on my RSS feed, so I knew what the story was all about. Aren’t there bots here that will visit links and provide a TL;DR summary so that I know if it’s worth the click?

    • @[email protected]
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      -21 year ago

      Maybe click on the link next time and avoid this altogether? I’m using Connect and had no issues “figuring out” the content of the post. Clickbait would also imply that the content behind the title is dubious but I’ve never once experienced that with Pluralistic. I recommend giving them a read whenever you see a link to their site with a title that draws your attention. They’re a high-quality source in my opinion.