Introducing the Needlestack

Ethan Maurice
3 min readJan 20, 2021
Do you ever feel like finding something truly great on the internet is like finding a needle in a haystack? Photo by Aurélie Cenno

The year is 2021 and we are more than two decades into mass adoption of the world wide web. We have devised brilliant ways to surf the hundreds of billions of pages that compose the internet by keyword, category, and recentness. Have you ever wondered, though, why are we unable to browse by best?

No search engine or social media site has yet to truly solve the problem of prioritizing quality. Not Google, not Facebook, not Tumblr, not Pinterest, not any other site.

I think Reddit has come the closest. But its crowd-based voting system lifts quick and clever above powerful and profound. Reddit can lead to many tremendous resources, but it often requires wading through seas of memes, screenshots, and photographs that make up the majority of the “Top All-Time” posts of most “subreddits” (what categories are called on Reddit).

For a while, I thought Reddit had actually made internet browsable by best. However, at the beginning of 2020, I discovered that a handful of my own actionable articles that once ranked among the “Top All-Time” posts on the Travel on a Shoestring Budget subreddit had been buried, largely by memes and pretty photos. Upon further investigation, I realized that quick and clever was almost always cream-of-the-crop on Reddit. We seem to have a knee-jerk reaction to “like” or “upvote” things that inspire these quick emotional hits…

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