It's interesting that your example is a "list of local chiro...

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2026-03-05T22:13:04Z

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It's interesting that your example is a "list of local chiropractors." That feels a bit like asking a stranger on the street for the best way to the train station, or maybe for a good restaurant within walking distance. In that sort of situation, I'd usually think that the stranger will make a good-faith effort to provide useful advice. And the trustworthiness of the advice in that situation doesn't really seem to depend on whether I also know that the stranger is , say, a friend of a friend of a friend of mine. I mean even if we don't have common friends at all, I'd trust the stranger just as much.

Or take something like a book recommendation. If I've been interacting with someone online for a while and have an idea of their opinions and sensibilities, I may on that basis be willing to buy a book based on their recommendation. But then suppose that it's not someone with whom I've interacted directly, but rather an online friend of an online friend. It seems to me that, without knowing more about them, I won't be any more likely to act on their book recommendation because we happen to have a common friend. In other words, I don't really think that the friends of my friends have better taste in books than any other random person.

I guess it's not clear to me that a friend-of-friend concept plays a huge role in my making decisions about who to trust, or whose content I want to see. It's possible that there will be greater alignment between me and those friends-of-friends along, say, "ideological" or "cultural" lines. But that doesn't really translate into my wanting to see their content - in fact, I may prefer to see content produced by people who do not align with me in these respects.

Just some thoughts.

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