Who Needs Steemit Etiquette? - Steem Smart Podcast Ep. 11a

in #steemit8 years ago (edited)

Viking madman @fyrstikken schools us in Steemit etiquette in under 16 minutes. Is this ironic?

Stephen Polsky ( @shneakysquirrel ) and George Donnelly ( @georgedonnelly ) are chatting with Kjetil Eilertsen ( @fyrstikken ) about proper behavior on Steemit.com in this 16-minute short video.

This is gonna get ironic real fast!

Next Episode: @fyrstikken vs @heiditravels — What Happened?

Next time (episode 11b), we’re talking with Viking madman @fyrstikken about the thousand-dollar drama that happened between him and travel blogger @heiditravels in Peru.

Subscribe to the Podcast

Listen to our audio-only feed at the gym, during boring downtime at work, in the car or while photographing your knitting needles in the backyard via our RSS feed. Or find us in these podcast directories.

Get an Email Notification

Enter your primary email address here to get an email notification for each new episode. Zero spam, unsubscribe anytime. Don’t miss an episode of The Steem Smart Podcast!

Get in on this!

Come on the show with us so we can promote your latest and greatest content any Saturday morning for 10 minutes.

Send tips, questions, complaints, refund requests, lawsuits, indecent proposals and duel challenges to [email protected].

Sort:  

etiquette what is that ? :P

It is what makes civilized relationships between people possible.

I know, I know I was just kidding :)

Ha! True, very true. Good answer.

Flagging to reduce payout is a bad thing. I don't like how much many people make. Yet it doesn't hurt me. It could be seen as if they didn't get that vote it might have gone to someone like me instead. Yet voting against it doesn't actually make that happen.

There is no reason to flag things like that. Part of the incentive of getting steem power is that I can increase how much I can reward people. Where does that incentive go if people can take the power of my steem power away?

There is no reason. I've said before. I don't like Caviar. Some people do. I don't go to the store and stick a flag on Caviar so people can buy it for less.

I've heard about the limited steem pool of reward. Yet when a post is down voted how does that then become paid to other people? You've actually diminished a vote due to voting power %.

Perceptions also do matter. This is a really bad PR thing. I know a half dozen people that I wanted to come to steemit.com and they won't come due to this one reason. I've tried to explain that it doesn't happen very often yet. They still are angry about it. If you have time I went into the flag in some detail in this post the other day.

This being in beta I do see it as a flaw we can address.

If we can increase the payout of those things we see as valuable, why should we not have the same power to decrease the payouts?

I'll admit that I was once on the let's-compain-about-downvotes train. I was bitter,and made a few negative comments about the whale who down voted me. But with hindsight I can see that I was just acting emotionally, not rationally.

Though it doesn't always work to my benefit I think the system makes sense.

If we can increase the payout of those things we see as valuable, why should we not have the same power to decrease the payouts?
Though it doesn't always work to my benefit I think the system makes sense.

Egg-freaking-zactly, thank you.

Oops, logged into the wrong account. This comment by George.

Gee I need to try that next time I am in a market where people create things. Decrease the price because I think people are willing to pay too much for it. Why have steem power at all if you or someone else can decide that I am not allowed to use my power as I see fit?

It isn't them making a decision for your Steem power. They are making a decision with theirs.

Look, I don't think people should use their down voting power willy-nilly. But it's in no way unfair.

Why have steem power at all if you or someone else can decide that I am not allowed to use my power as I see fit?

I'm saying the exact same thing right back at you: Flagging, just like upvoting, is me using my Steem Power as I see fit. What gives you the right to stop me?

Your market metaphor is not apt. The Steem marketplace has a fixed maximum daily sales amount that is rewarded based on the relative Steem Power being flexed behind each piece of content. No flea market or farmer's market works like that. Hence, your comparison is just not apt. It doesn't work.

Flagging to reduce payout is a bad thing

I don't do it myself but it's part of the design of the system, therefore I don't see the problem with it. And there definitely is a reason to do it: because you freaking feel like it! (Same as with upvotes.) Steem is about subjective proof of work. The whole idea is that it's subjective. Each person uses it as they see fit.

Where does that incentive go if people can take the power of my steem power away?

It's still there. It's simply balanced by something else.

Yet when a post is down voted how does that then become paid to other people?

You answered it yourself. Decrease one post's percentage of the pot and the difference is redistributed. It's very small but based on my understanding it's a fact.

I know a half dozen people that I wanted to come to steemit.com and they won't come due to this one reason.

They'll refuse free money and the chance to earn more because someone might downvote them? These delicate flowers need to man up.

This being in beta I do see it as a flaw we can address.

Downvotes/flags are a feature, not a bug. People need to read some Eckhart Tolle, watch some Alan Watts videos and put their delicate egos in their proper places.

Thanks for the comment!

Appeal to Authority doesn't prove anything. I can read Eckhart Tolle, and I can watch Alan Watts. They are people like you and I. They are not gods. I can choose to agree or not agree with their solutions. They may indeed work, and they may indeed for the most part be great. I haven't seen any human creation without flaw. I don't really like treating the words of anyone like dogma, even if they come from someone I believe is a wise person.

I don't approach this issue from an EGO point of view. I have not had a flagging happen to me. I've seen it happen to others. I've seen it abused, I've seen it lead to retaliation, and seen a dog pile effect and we haven't even had most of the world join us yet.

Right now it'd be theoretically possible for a wealthy person to purchase a lot of steem, power up, and decide they wanted to down vote everything I write, or every steemsmart podcast, or every post by George Donnelly. They could do this without reading it. It is rather idealistic to think this will not happen as it already happens at places like reddit.

In addition, if we are planning on mainstream adoption of steem do you think people are going to give a damn about Eckhart Tolle initially? I seriously doubt it. I do believe we could educate people over the long term.

As to the whitepaper, I've read it several times. Things adapt, things change, and we learn from our trials.

The fact that people feel the need to down vote someone due to disagreement, or because they subjectively believe it has too high of a potential payout is far more of an EGO centric thing than what I am proposing. Up vote only removes the possibility of you deciding you think everything I write is subjectively worth $0.00 and you having the power to enforce that.

If it did not impact reputation and finances and instead was just a NUMBER of down votes then that could feed the egos of people that feel they need to down vote others.

Loading...

We hit the nesting limit elsewhere:

I'm saying the exact same thing right back at you: Flagging, just like upvoting, is me using my Steem Power as I see fit. What gives you the right to stop me?

Your market metaphor is not apt. The Steem marketplace has a fixed maximum daily sales amount that is rewarded based on the relative Steem Power being flexed behind each piece of content. No flea market or farmer's market works like that. Hence, your comparison is just not apt. It doesn't work.

How do you know it doesn't work? As far as I know it hasn't been tried. In addition, up vote only does not stop you from NOT supporting something. You simply don't vote. It does prevent you from deciding that you don't like me, or value something so you can now strip the value other people perceived it had.

However, let's go to this idea that due to a fixed amount when we remove that value it is returned to the pool and redistributed. As far as I can tell it is not redistributed based upon votes, but instead would be dumped into the pool that is distributed to people across the board via steem power. So we could simply remove voting at all and everyone would get paid based upon their steem power. I don't see that as offering much incentive so I don't endorse that and I am certain you wouldn't either. Yet that is me taking it to an extreme of everyone cancelling out each others vote.

Please consider this hypothetical scenario.

Someone (neither you or I) writes a rather brilliant article on some philosophical study and they put a lot of work into it. Some people value that effort and vote it up to $10.00. You come along and have accumulated power and the study contradicts your personal belief so you vote it down to $0.00.

Now the people that value it have had you cancel out their investment in steem. You also will have crushed that other person's work due to you seeing it as having no value due to a dogmatic or personal preference.

I recall the instance with @dollarvigilante and you likely do as well where his post about tips for people using steem was voted down to about 10%. While I personally think that celebrities are a bit overpaid for some of their posts, other people do not agree with me. In that particular case the reason it was down voted to 10% it's original value was because there were too many similar articles already posted before.

Due to discoverability dollarvigilante was new here, and it is not like it is easy to find such posts. So that post obviously had value to some people. I do think a large amount of the value of the post was actually due to the celebrity nature of the dollarvigilante, yet that was not the reason given.

Should people need to justify their actions? Currently if it stays as it is no. You should be able to go down vote nuts if you want to. Yet there will be consequences and it will cause war. It is pretty much guaranteed to happen and there is plenty of precedence to back that up.

So I am NOT 100% certain up votes only would fix the problem. It hasn't been tried. Yet I am rather fond of experiments. I am also not one of those that if it is tried I'll doggedly demand we keep doing it. This is not about me being right or wrong. It is simply perceiving what is interpreted as hostile actions by many people (read the posts, and the topic comes up a lot) and I actually do tend to adhere to the NAP as much as possible. I also have a strong sense of justice so if I perceive people being attacked I like to be the hero sometimes stupidly so. So from an EGO perspective... that actually is an ego problem I have. ;)

Flag:

Flagging a post can remove rewards and make this material less visible. The flag should be used for the following:

Fraud or Plagiarism
Hate Speech or Internet Trolling
Intentional miss-categorized content or Spam

That's the purpose of a flag, as designed by the system, not your interpretation of what the flag was designed for. Click on it, it will tell you what the purpose of the flag is used for. You can make up whatever justification you want to use it, ok, but don't say that your reason is why it was introduced into the system. That's not accurate. I have used it to downvote porn as I don't see that as valid or desirable content. But that's not the original purpose of the Flag feature.

That's only been added recently. The white paper is clear that the definition of abuse is still fuzzy. I take the text you quoted as merely a draft, perhaps posted there as a way to calm all the downvote butthurt (which seems like a mistake), but not a definitive statement.

don't say that your reason is why it was introduced into the system

You've lost me. Everyone upset about flagging/downvoting wants to push their own personal opinions of how it's supposed to be used on everyone else, frequently speaking with greater authority than they actually command.

My point remains that downvoting is part of this proudly-subjective system and can be used as one pleases. The white paper doesn't contradict this.

I have used it to downvote porn

Do you see that porn is not one of the reasons you yourself cited for what flagging should be used for, but you did it anyway? This is my point exactly: the use of flagging is subjective by design, just like the use of upvoting.

You can legitimately argue for why you don't like flagging but you can't claim any authority but your own to back your position.

Thanks for the comment!

I said:

"You can make up whatever justification you want to use it, ok, but don't say that your reason is why it was introduced into the system. That's not accurate. I have used it to downvote porn as I don't see that as valid or desirable content. But that's not the original purpose of the Flag feature."

I said, I used it for my justifications, but I'm not saying it's why the feature was created to justify why I do what I do. LOL. My point was about what it's intended purpose is for as per the Flag description which I pasted, and we can all make up any justification to use it, but let's not just say that our reasons are why the feature was made in the first place. Anyone can use the flag for any reason they choose, but that's different than saying the flag feature was meant to be used that way, when it isn't as per the description when you click on the flag option, it says what they intend to use it for. Thanks.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.17
TRX 0.13
JST 0.028
BTC 56681.24
ETH 3016.79
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.28