The front page of the internet is great for product reviews.
The best place for product reviews is ... Reddit? Do you know how many different high-quality yet affordable 4K TVs there are out there? Do you know, based on thousands of reviews across dozens of websites, how unnervingly difficult it is to tell them apart and pick the right one to serve as the centerpiece of your shoebox-size New York City apartment? I do. With Black Friday approaching, itâs finally time to upgrade my home entertainment situation, and although [I was once a professional TV reviewer](, Iâm not up to date on the latest models and features. Unfortunately, the internet is mostly full of terrible advice. Many of the reviews on shopping sites these days can be both convincing and, thanks to advances in AI composition, actually written by bots. Others seem too glowing to be real. Even professional review sites, like Consumer Reports or Wirecutter, donât feel particularly authoritative anymore. And these problems affect more than just TV shoppers. Whether youâre looking for a new TV or the best bagel in Brooklyn, youâre bound to come across online reviews, and itâs hard to find something that feels trustworthy. There are a lot of reasons why this is true, and it doesnât look like the situation will get any better soon. Despite regulators and tech platformsâ best efforts, the billion-dollar fake reviews industry is too big and complex to stop, as [the New York Times reported this week](. Meanwhile, professional review sites [arenât as useful as they used to be](. More and more of them seem like theyâre chasing search words and affiliate marketing revenue rather than serving the readersâ best interests. (Affiliate marketing represents the special links to buy a product in a review, which give the media company a commission when the reader clicks through and purchases that thing. Vox Media, which owns Vox, does this, as do many other media companies, including the New York Times.) So in an absence of authenticity and authority, where does an industrious internet user turn? Reddit, of course. Sometimes known by its old slogan âthe front page of the internet,â Reddit is most valuable for the knowledge collected in its very specific, often obsessive communities called subreddits. This is where youâll find lots of real people with helpful things to say about the stuff youâre thinking about buying or the bagels youâre considering eating. And it doesnât take much to tap into the Reddit hivemind. Just try tacking âredditâ onto the end of a Google query (e.g., âbest white noise machine redditâ). Youâll quickly find quite a few other internet users with the same question, dealing with the same set of frustrations over the lack of reliable information in the traditional product reviews ecosystem. In case you have any doubts about how hard it is to find reliable reviews, try Googling âbest 4K TV.â On the results page, youâll likely find a list of lists, some of which come from big-box retailers like Best Buy and others from professional review sites, including editorial sites like Wirecutter. The reviews on most of them, one could argue, are effectively ads within ads, since the companies reviewing the products are also getting paid for recommending them, through affiliate links. (As someone who spent the better part of a decade [reviewing gadgets online](, I will admit that tech journalists often do their best to offer good recommendations, but the digital media business inevitably rewards the sites that win Google search results and convert clicks into purchases.) Now, if you narrow down those results by searching âbest 4K TV reddit,â youâll find a long list of discussions about different TVs. Youâll also see that thereâs a specific subreddit called [r/4kTV](, which is a treasure trove of knowledge based on real peopleâs experiences, including advice on what to buy and what to avoid. There are plenty of links to more information or worthwhile reviews. It takes a bit more work to wade through all of the Reddit threads, but you can also feel confident that the person giving you the advice doesnât have a financial incentive to point you one way or the other. They just really, really, really care about 4K TVs. For my time and attention, Reddit is the best place to get help when Iâm trying to buy stuff, especially if itâs something I donât know a lot about. If Iâm looking for a new kitchen knife, I can dive into [r/chefknives](. When I debated the merits of the latest Dyson model, the kind folks in [r/vacuumcleaners]( told me everything I needed to know. I actually spent hours on [r/goodyearwelt]( figuring out which leather boots I could polish and resole again and again. Subreddits like these are very specific, which is the point. Theyâre run by enthusiasts with deep knowledge of footwear or home appliances or whatever, and theyâre willing to share that information for free. If you canât find what youâre looking for by searching a subreddit, you can also just ask in a post and wait for thoughtful answers to show up in the comments. This seems like pretty rudimentary advice, and thatâs the beauty of it. Today, Reddit still manages to function the way weâd hoped the social web would when it was born nearly 20 years ago. Itâs a dynamic online gathering place, one thatâs not so obviously consumed by maximizing profits as, say, Instagram is these days. Real people are sharing information without thinking of ads or affiliate links, while other real people are moderating the discussion and promoting the most useful tips to the top. Of course, Reddit is not the only place online where youâll find websites full of people sharing tips. You can find countless forums where communities nerd out about things theyâre interested in. If youâre a bike person, youâll find some interesting stuff on [r/bikes](, for example, but you could get lost for days in [the minutiae of Bike Forums](. The big difference between specialist forums like that and Reddit is a mix of size â Reddit is one of the most visited sites online â and SEO. Because Reddit is so big and its archives go back so far, you can easily Google just about any question plus âredditâ on the end and find a decent result, in a way that is more difficult in other forums. Give it a shot. Donât be surprised if you get sucked in and end up joining [a community for frugal audiophiles]( or [one for antique coin enthusiasts]( â or both. I did. âAdam Clark Estes, senior editor [Someone just lost their phone. It sinks into a container of water, their hand outstretched but not reaching it.]( Peter Cade/Getty Images [Your phone is the key to your digital life. 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