dirtyharry50: So I guess what I failed to communicate very well was, why the need for a study when the answer is already known? People abuse the rep system to deliberately fuck with other people.
Since I mentioned that this could be used with regard to the rep attacks (or whatever) and the ensuing argument about that, a misconception has formed that this is RepLog's aim.
RepLog was made so people had a record of their rep. Any studying done on the data was just going to be general statistics like "who gained the most rep in a month", "what was the total rep gained by all the participants" and "are there particular times when rep changes", "how many rep do you need to get 3 stars", not specifically "who might be the target of a rep attack".
Obviously, someone who was under such attack would likely stick out like a sore thumb and I would likely go and see if it was an attack (seeing what kind of posts they make that get low-rated), but more out of curiosity than a campaign.
dirtyharry50: I like the path of least resistance myself, the beauty of simplicity - the removal entirely of the rep buttons. Problem solved.
It's unclear if you mean "the removal of rep" or the "removal of the post rating system". I'm going to go with the rep system entirely because otherwise, rep would just show roughly how much you posted and/or that you selected as the answer to question topics (which is inaccurate for other reasons).
I would personally be unhappy with the outright removal of rep because as I mentioned, I see my rep as something the community has given me. I'm proud of it. It is my little "badge of honour". Like with Namur.. while I have been testing the rating system on his rep, I've read a fair amount of his posts and he has, without question,
earned that rep by being extremely helpful and it would make me sad to see him lose it through no wrong-doing of his own.
I suppose I see the removal of it as "punishing the majority of people for the misbehaviour of the few" which may actually even be GOGs reason for not removing it. They may see the abuse of the ratings system as much as a given of having a system that mostly works as they do seeing piracy as a given when you distribute games. Of course, I'm just guessing here but it is a plausible stance.
There is, of course, another solution which would be to remove the rep system and give those who have earned a high rep some other indicator of their positive contribution. A little medal where the rep is now perhaps. Or just use the existing stars. Then the question would become how do newer users earn stars? Nomination and chosen by GOG (with a badass site announcement, that would be awesome!). Nominations and voting?
dirtyharry50: I think we could probably get along just fine without the minimal benefits of the system you pointed out to me. I can only speak for myself of course but I don't see those "benefits" as being any big deal at all. I can read and discern for myself which posts are interesting. I don't need green highlighting telling me what to read and I do not need posts to be hidden to protect me from terrible posts. I would gladly trade off those "benefits" to see rep abuse go away permanently and then nobody's feelings get hurt. If somebody has something to say to someone, they are going to have to come right out and say it or else let it slide, none of this passive-aggressive button clicking.
We would indeed get along just fine. Those that only voice their opinion because they can do so anonymously would lose their power/voice and those that only did it that way because it was easier will confront the entire community with their disapproval, to be chewed out if warranted.
A possible problem is we don't know how much drama gets avoided by allowing people to be passive-aggressive, as you say, instead of forcing them into public confrontation to voice their disapproval. I think it is worth considering that in our efforts to stop rep drama, we may unleash other drama.
dirtyharry50: I think a simple post count is better for those that desire some little ego boost for their time in service on the forums whoever they may be.
Unfortunately, those that earn that "little ego boost" may tend to post less due to making considered, deliberated posts. Just compare my posts against jamotides. Some (most?) of mine took a chunk of time to write as I write and rewrite to try and make myself clear, try to avoid coming across badly, making sure the forum won't freak out because of a missed quote tag or something, changing the order of my sentences, changing formatting.. the list goes on. Luckily, I know I am not alone in doing this! :)
His on the other hand? A handful of sentences.
It's funny because I was actually proving my point that someone would waste their time making 100 accounts by "wasting my time" arguing with him. I have learned that he wouldn't understand the subtlety of that though.
dirtyharry50: I was just thinking what else could be good. Just kill the minus button and leave the plus button so folks can upvote posts they like for whatever reasons. This keeps things positive and retains half the benefit of the current system.
Unfortunately, people would just instead use the rep system to uprate all their own posts, undermining the system that way. There is no way to tell the difference between a post that a bunch of people liked and a post that one person with several accounts liked.. except by reading it, at which point, you've made your own mind up anyway.
So that path leads to the "you may as well just remove the entire thing then", in my opinion.
dirtyharry50: I think too that again human nature being what it is, hiding "bad" posts really doesn't help us at all. Wouldn't it be most likely that a person seeing a hidden post would become curious about that post, about why it was hidden and reveal it to see? I think more often than not that is what would happen. So much for shielding us from terribleness. It is this same morbid curiosity that creates traffic jams whenever there is an auto accident somewhere. Everyone just has to look even though it is not something very nice to look at potentially.
All too true :)
I personally hold that stance that you should leave "low hanging fruit" such as the downrate system around. Those who are going to abuse something will choose the easiest way.. which happens to be an extremely monitor-able way and thus, you can easily identify those people who you don't want in your community.
GOG doesn't have the manpower to watch over the forums, but it doesn't take much manpower to curbstomp someone abusing a system when the computer can figure out that they are :)
jamotide: Well maybe you should have only posted that if I actually did do what he expected?
Well.. that proves you didn't read the PM I sent him.
Shaolin_sKunk: Could you do me a favour and post this *entire* PM in the RepLog topic
when I ask you to (which should be when jamotide replies after post #274)?