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RE: Separating Content by Type: Making Steemit a Buffet and Not a Stew

in #steemit8 years ago

The difference in labor-value will be handled automatically by competition. If links are overrewarded people will post more of them, and fewer and fewer will gain votes. Either the quality (and timeliness) required to be rewarded will go up, or it will become somewhat random, with those who post a link and win the raffle rewarded, but most who post links will not be rewarded much if at all.

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Or. People will post more and more in an attempt to merely get lucky. Because its really not that hard to post 100 or 1000 links or 10000 links, even if you're making sure that your links are somewhat topical, there are a ton of link aggregators out there. It wouldnt be hard at all to find 20 or 30 sites like coin telegraph and link every single news story that comes out of them.

Even if this task could not be automated diretly with a bot of some sort (and i strongly suspect it could), there are already a ton of windows automation programs that would bring the compatative amount of effort to practically zero.

And even if the labor differential was not huge, there is another problem. The people who cannot make money writing "long content" (either because theyre bad at english or because they have nothing to say or whatever) are still offered a better hourly by link spamming.

That is to say that the raffle ticket we offer link spammers, for at least some of them, is the their highest hourly EV option. SO why not gather as many raffle tickets as possible.

Posting the links is kind of useless. They need to get votes. Probably the most successful link posters will be voting their own links to give them at least minimal visibility, which means vote power becomes the limited resource, and those doing it will will need to be selective.

Beyond that, even posting the links themselves requires bandwidth, which requires SP. So those wanting to compete by posting links will need to buy more SP, both limiting volume and driving up demand for SP.

And even if the labor differential was not huge, there is another problem. The people who cannot make money writing "long content" (either because theyre bad at english or because they have nothing to say or whatever) are still offered a better hourly by link spamming

You call that a "problem". I call it an opportunity to be more inclusive. Instead of shutting out people with weaker english skills or less captivating personalities, I'd rather have a system them offers them opportunities as well.