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SlashNET IRC Chat Tonight w/ CmdrTaco & Hemos 176

At 9 pm eastern, Hemos & I are gonna be in #forum on irc.slashnet.org to answer questions about Slashdot. There's a lot of random stuff that's happened since the last time we did this, so this is a chance to ask questions about Story Selection, moderation, Slashcode, or whatever else is on your mind. If anyone wants to take our answers and send in updates and additions to the FAQ afterwards, that would make our lives easier, and our inboxes smaller ;)
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SlashNET IRC Chat Tonight w/ CmdrTaco & Hemos

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  • But why? What is your argument for going private with karma? I can't imagine any advantages. Did I blink and miss something?

  • by Pinball Wizard ( 161942 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:33AM (#729348) Homepage Journal
    >> There's a lot of random stuff that's happened since the last time we did this

    Um...what about the Signal 11 vs. CmdrTaco IRC chat [kuro5hin.org] that's floating around. Is that true? I think you should confirm or deny that rumor here on /., because not all of us will be on IRC tonight.

    My own opinion about /. is...you don't have a moderation problem, you have a spamming problem. kuro5hin deletes spam posts, and I think most of us here wouldn't mind at all if you just got rid of the garbage posts. IMO, that's the main difference. I'm not saying moderation doesn't need to be improved, but the spam posts are definitely the biggest problem.

    I watch the sea.
    I saw it on TV.

  • After about a month, stories get archived and can no longer be viewed nested and a lot of posts are missing.

    More annoyingly, all my saved URL's to interesting posts get killed!

    How about just stopping accepting posts to stories after a while and not archiving at all? Doesn't your database scale up to the task?
  • I really can't understand why or how the whole Signal 11 vs CmdrTaco thing became so big. To make a long story short it's one guy thinking the /. moderation system is flawed, telling it to the /. head guys who do not agree with his points. Correct me if I'm wrong or if I missed something somewhere but I really can't understand why it had to take such proportion?!? Who slapped who first? Who was the first to take an aggressive tone in their private discussions?!?!

    Please people realise that this whole thing is a non-issue currently turning into an holy war where both sides just hope to make the other guy look ridiculous. I really don't see why this has become such an issue and why every single comment-thread on /. AND k5 these days include some comments about how Signal 11 is a Troll or a karma whore and CmdrTaco is a tyranic dickhead.

    Let's all just forget that and let it become nothing more than it should have been and move on with constructive things...


    "When I was a little kid my mother told me not to stare into the sun...
  • Karma can be used, among other things, as a measure of your reputation on Slashdot (a very crude and rough measure, yes, but a measure nonetheless).

    First, I'd rather have replies than karma, but YMMV. Also, couldn't you keep up with that by looking at your user info and seeing what comments of yours got modded up? It would be an informal way to keep track of your karma, as would the +1 bonus, etc.


    --

  • Umm, it's right there in the post that started this thread. Telling people how the system works, and when the functioning of the system changes.

    There is nothing in the FAQ about the karma cap, and it's been months since it was implemented.


    --
  • by TOTKChief ( 210168 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @10:17AM (#729353) Homepage

    While doing something completely mindless at work (pecking a software-hardware interactions document to control spaceflight hardware for ISS), I got to thinking:

    Why not change the moderation scales somewhat?

    Here's the thoughts:

    • Is -1 to 5 enough? I'd say no, not at this scale of comments/users/page views. 5's are obviously "good" comments, and 4's are pretty good, too. But what's the line between 4 and 5? Fuzzy, depending upon the moderator. Is it a great 4? Maybe. Does it need a 5? Probably not. Would a 4.5 be nice? Sure. I'd think /. could go to 7-10 on the top side without killing things. This would make moderation a bit easier--each point counts less. Karma levels would have to be adjusted accordingly, but...
    • Allow more tags with points. Maybe there are enough. I don't know. But I'm thinking that maybe someone needs a laugh--let them select all the "Funny" comments, then select their threshhold. If I needed a laugh--most days I do--I'd seek that option out. If I was interested in something, I'd want to see "Informative" comments. If I was passionate, I'd want those "Insightful" comments culled for me. If I'm feeling deviant, I'd want those "Offtopic" comments gathered together and not necessarily modded down.
    • Now, to see this post get to (Score: 8, "Insightfully Funny")


    --
  • I agree. Exactly the same post can be deserving of a +1, Interesting if it was at 1, or a -1, Overrated if it was at 4. In metamod, displaying the change in score would be a tremendous help in deducing what the moderator was trying to do.

    Also, your point of banality and negative, but well-thought out commentary, may be a consequence of the moderation categories. Essentially, by using the term "Informative" you're ruling out a +1 for such a negative comment, it's Flamebait by definition -- from the mod's point of view. Perhaps it is possible to encourage mods to think in terms of how well is a post formulated, does it make sense, is it rational or emotional, by using different terms : "Rational", "Overemotional", or something like that. Not sure if overemotional wouldn't trigger the same kneejerk reaction as Flamebait, though. Another random idea is a -1 option for obvious karmawhoring, there's only Overrated for this now.

    PS, hide the karma :)

  • If you don't think it would benefit others to read, why would you bother posting it in the first place?

    I reread my post and can see how I was unclear. DebtAngel got it right... This post (and DebtAngel's) is a perfect example. My reply is in response to your post, and while a couple of people might like to see it, I like to keep posts like this under the +2 boundary so people who don't want to see it don't have to.
  • He becomes somewhat responsible for the content of comments.

    IANAFL.
  • I believe I can speak for all women and right-minded human beings when I say your use of the word "suck" is highly offensive. It's hypocritical for you on the one hand to demand that your lover (assuming one exists) perform fellatio while simultaneously using that act as a derogatory slur. We don't have to take it, you know. A lot would change over night if we went on strike and men like you never got another blowjob until you met our terms.
  • Think of the mail Britney Spears gets! "I'd really like to hump your left leg"
  • Actually, I could win this one; I seem to remember that magenta syringe did a pretty lame version of the "Slashdot is suing me!" troll, which fooled about three people :)

    streetlawyer, posting anonymously to preserve my precious Karma.

  • Well, the quote Michael was reffering to is as follows.

    in many respects, Trolls don't care for the very web page in which they operate(emphasis added)

    Some trolls don't care at all. However, most of us feel that we can make a person think twice about what they are saying, or make a moderator think twice about how they are moderating. In that respect, many of us care.

    On the other hand, most of us don't care about

    1. How much karma we earn.

    2. What kind of /. "popularity" we have.

    I care about all sorts of things, `tis true, however, that most of those things have nothing to do with /.

  • What does "pompous"-ness have to do with the ICANN story being important? Paying attention to ICANN is important. They are the U.N. of the internet. If I said, "The U.S. presidential election is important", would that also be "pompous"? Maybe you should also bookmark www.dictionary.com.
    --
    Michael Sims-michael at slashdot.org
  • Soo, we have a bunch of conformist "individuals" that feel that they should only espouse what other "individuals" feel is the "correct" thing to say. This unnerves me considerably. People should be saying what they THINK, not what will get them the biggest karma.

    In all seriousness, I don't see what karma can do, besides lowering consistently bad messages from one individual. And even then, that would be taken care of in a matter of minutes under a karma-less system. All karma does is turn Slashdot into a game for people with no life.
  • Not that I'm an expert on this, but I think the problem is that it would be a major headache for them in the *short* term.

    A lot of people like to see their karma go up, its kind of like positive reinforcement for doing a good thing. Like when I moderate, a few days later its nice to sometimes see my karma go up a couple points (if the meta-modder liked what I did anyway). Same thing with making posts that get rated up to 4 or 5, its nice to see the karma increase.

    Is it necessary? No. But its nice.

    Long term, people could probably get used to not seeing it, but short term it would make a lot of people upset by taking away a little thing that they like.

    CT&H probably don't want to have to deal with all those upset people, and I can't say I blame them.
  • by GeorgeH ( 5469 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:36AM (#729364) Homepage Journal
    Geez guys, how about a little advanced notice? Parties, talks, chats, all announced the day of, sometimes after the fact! If I had been given a little advance notice I could have booked a flight to whereever this "IRC" place is, and participated.

    Oh well, I guess I'll just spend tonight figuring out what this "Microsoft Chat" program is. Heheh, it looks pretty familiar [jerkcity.com]!
    --
  • by Tridus ( 79566 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:40AM (#729365) Homepage
    The problem with deleting spam is simply, who gets to delete it?

    Is it CT&H? Everybody who can post articles? Moderators with 50 karma? Any moderator?

    Besides, at that point instead of obvious spam, we would get questionable borderline spam, and god forbid if that gets deleted, then we'll have entire threads full of "/. is censoring us!"

    Its more trouble then its worth.
  • SOn-of-a-bitch. WHo the fuck put that goddamned code option there! It came up HTML in preview and then code when I posted. Let me try again:

    I pray, beg, and plead with the Slashdot community for something here.

    I will not be able to catch the IRC chat tonight, so I hope someone is decent enough to fully log it.

    And if Sig11 is still out there, please god, let him show up for this. It would ruin Taco's night, and be great fun for the rest of us.

    Wanna know why I ask this? Click here [slashdot.org] to witness a conversation and a previous IRC log about Taco and trolls and karma whores (OH MY!).
  • From Michael:
    ummm... It's trolls like you who make it suck.

    Say what? I thought he had valid and constructive points (and #1 and 2 were questions I was planning to ask tonight). Could it be that the attitude of "We are your gods -- know your place and mindlessly accept what we tell you and we'll permit you to call yourself a Geek and Member Of The Community!" attitude that's come over the Slashdot editors in the last year is what makes it suck?

  • Can Hemos and CmdrTaco please tell us why going private with karma won't work in the long run?

    You know, I personally like seeing my karma. It's my motivation to write well-thought out, informative comments. Without it, I'd probably blow off slashdot and go elsewhere. Since my karma is fairly high, I suspect that people value my comments.

    I suspect I'm not the only one like that.

    I posit that people knowing their karma is a bad thing. It's not like some deity lets us know how many good and bad points we've got in this world.

    Maybe if "God" let us know when we were doing something positive or negative by simple incrementing or decrementing a counter, and the counter had to be over a certain positive number to get into "Heaven", then more people would do more good things. As it is, even for the religious, the whole Heaven thing is too Ethereal (sorry, couldn't resist.) It's too much effort to be a good person at every single moment, to be filled with humility and goodness during every action you take.

    But if people were good enough, the majority of the people in the world would be a whole fuck of a lot better people than they are now. Strive, strive, and strive some more, and all you do is end up dead. So why look out for anyone else?

    Post, post, and post some more, and you never know your karma. So why bother to construct an intelligent comment?

  • At 9:38pm Eastern, I'll be on my roof watching the shuttle launch. Come on, you're all invited... we'll do some structural tests on my house.
  • by Karmageddon ( 186836 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:43AM (#729370)
    I've meta-moderated a small bit over the past few months. It's unrewarding. It undoubtedly works to "catch" evil moderators, those who moderate up garbage or down good stuff. But it does nothing to help the real problem that Slashdot faces: creeping banality. The meta-mod question is something along the lines of, is this "Informative" rating Fair, or Unfair? And, in most of the cases I've seen, 1 informative point should have been awarded. But, I'm equally sure that 4 informative points should not have been awarded, and that question does not get asked. The moderation system is also very negative toward negative comments, but rationally negative should be treated just like positive. Earnestness by ingenuous newbies is treated very kindly, but it is often completely uninteresting to those with some knowledge of an area. However, meta-mod would surely punish those who tried to push back against these tides.

    In terms of plain old moderation, I've a few suggestions for improvement. How about revealing to the moderator some historical information about the poster? For example, streetlawyer is an admitted troll, and he has some talent for posting "interesting" points of view that get him some mod points, but he uses those points for evil. Couldn't some rating be added to give a hint that he should be treated with skepticism unless it is clear that his posts are not karma whoring?

    Then there's the problem of the increasing number of moderators who think Micros~1 gets treated unfairly. It is a theoretically valid point of view, OK, but I'm completely fed up with the amount of Windows and Microsoft in my life. I know more about the company than 99% of posters here, and it is no longer an open question to me; I'm simply not interested in hearing people defend Microsoft. Others may have similar/opposite feelings about other issues. How about letting each user moderate the moderators. I don't want to see the moderation that comes from certain moderators. Over time I could indicate that by simply clicking "personally overrated" on posts that I see getting too high. Yes, the straightforward implementation would be computationally prohibitive. But, perhaps there are aggregate statistics that would show large clumps of Slashdot users in various "camps" and they could better see what they are interested in.

    Finally, in terms of plain old moderation, I don't much enjoy doing it either. There tends to be too much "grade inflation" as hinted previously, so I rarely see something that needs more points, just things that wish for fewer. (Sometimes I see strong evidence there is a hidden moderation system taking place: Slashdot editors with unlimited points hammering things into rough shape on the fly and letting the public system tweak the results.)

    Finally (I guess these are just random thoughts), how about an "offtopic" rating that is not negative. Sometimes I want to shut off all the "noise" in a discussion, but sometimes it's funny and adds color. It would be nice if moderators could rate topicality without devaluing.

  • I'm with ya brother. And I wouldn't say your comment deserved modding down. It should at the least be modded up as funny.

    This place is a gigantic joke. I'm glad I got a sense of humor (and a pair of hip waders).
  • Karma doesn't/shouldn't really matter. Having something interesting to say should.

    Ah, but you see, that is what pisses some of us off so much. We have to browse at -1 to see all of the interesting comments and have to sort through a lot of garbage. Why? Because there is no real check on the moderation (yes, meta-mod, but that's just as big of a joke as moderation itself).

    Just because someone doesn't post a view that you 100% agree with, that is absolutely no reason to mark him down. And it's happening way, way too often. Mark down stupid crap, but if it's a well worded, on-topic, and completely relevant post, don't mark it down just because you can't fucking handle someone having an opinion that differs from your own. That's just wrong! And I understand Siggy's point on that. Although I agree that he did take it a little too personally. I do have a wife and family and quite a bit of a life outside of slashdot. But I suppose some people don't.
  • whatever, faggot.

  • First off, I don't do fucking web design on my slashdot comments. I write (type) and post. I don't give a fuck if it's 'designed' asshole! I do plenty of web design outside of my slashdot life and when I'm here I don't want to spend time 'designing' when I have something to say.

    And second off, if you really fucking think that Kuro5hin has something to prove by posting that IRC log and falsifying it, then by all means, tell taco to sue their fucking asses off!

    I think Siggy had some damn good points in there, the primary one being, Taco doesn't give a damn what people say. No matter what they suggest, if it wasn't Taco's original idea, he's going to say fuck off and tell you it couldn't work. So fuck him.

    And in case you couldn't tell, I'm a little fucking testy because of all the bullshit that I've witnessed on slashdot the past few days. And reading usenet has made me even bitchier. Thank god I have a life off-line to keep me attached to reality, or this place would have driven me completely insane by now. But for those that don't, I feel for you. I remember when "heavy metal" took it's great tumble (and that was my entire life), and it was the worst few years of my life. But I lived through it. ANd you'll live through this. Just find something else to do. Which is probabl what I'll be doing again in a couple of weeks. (Waiting for my Karma to sink again. I've posted a few negative comments lately, gonna get burned by the zealotous moderators).
  • when do i get my BJ?
  • What have we here?

    A troll!

    Go away.
  • Which part do you think is immature? Where I defend my (so far) good name? Or where I note that insulting people makes them angry?
    --
  • Which part do you think is immature?

    The part where you threaten to become a troll if people don't say what you want to hear. If you don't like the way you are treated here, go away. I've been pissed off at being unfairly moderated, but I recognize the urge for revenge as immature. You should too.

  • by AstroJetson ( 21336 ) <gmizell@@@carpe-noctum...net> on Thursday October 05, 2000 @11:58AM (#729379) Homepage
    You raise a lot of good issues, and I agree to a certain point. But /. has joined the big leagues and that means that a certain level of professionalism is expected. It's not just Rob's little pet project anymore. When I see bad grammar, spelling errors (how many times has CT spelled "too" T-O?), repeated or inaccurate stories and the like, frankly I'm a bit embarassed. I think that it's not unreasonable to expect more from one of the (if not *the*) flagship web sites of the open source movement. I don't think it's too much to ask to make the site look sharp and professional or to do a little research before putting up a story.

    I sympathize with Rob, I really do. It must be painful to see your creation attacked by trolls and spammers from one direction, and an endless stream of complaints from the other. But some of these complaints are legit. And he has gotten secretive in his changes to the mod system, and defensive about them. A lot of the complaints would be nipped in the bud if he just told us "Hey guys, there have been some changes, here's what they are and here's why I made them." That's more in the open source spirit than secretly making changes to the Slashcode. (Yes, I know I can just go look at it, but for one thing, I'm not a perl poet and secondly, I'm not interested in diffing the code every couple of weeks to see what changes have been made.) In the irc log he talks about how he gets tired of hearing the same suggestions over and over. Then why doesn't he publish the ones that have already suggested and the reason they haven't been implemented? Somebody else said that they never read the faq. Well there's no reason to - it hasn't been updated in over a year. And it *still* says "updated 9.9", that would be 9.9.1999.

    Af for the mod system itself, I don't think it's horribly broken. The biggest problem is that moderators aren't doing a good job. That's not a problem that can be fixed within the system. There are some things that might help, but if moderators are modding trolls up, that's a societal problem that is outside the scope of any moderation scheme. Some things that *could* improve the system are:

    1) Make karma hidden again. Karma shouldn't be a spectator sport. I know it's a rush to see your karma increase, but it's just a number. If you're getting modded up more than down you know it's increasing - you don't need to see the number in your user page to know that. Posting a thoughtful reply or participating in a lively discussion should be reward enough. Yes there will be significant lashback, but Rob's just gonna have to put on the asbestos suit for a couple of weeks and ride it out. Maybe some people will leave too. That might not be a bad thing. Are the posters that only post to see their karma increase the type we want around here anyway? To me that's the definition of a karma whore.

    2) Require a higher karma to get mod points. Maybe the vets are better at recognizing the trolls and karma whores. Maybe not, but it seems like it's worth a shot.

    3) Give some feedback from M2 to the moderators. Right now if I mod a post and it gets whacked in M2, I don't know why or even which mod was the one that did it. It would be helpful to know which one of my mods was thought to be unfair and why. Hopefully better moderation would be the result. Perhaps not, maybe all we'd get is things clustered more toward the mean.

    4) Force moderators to browse at -1, newest first instead of +1 highest score first. In other words, ignore the settings in comments.pl when you have mod points. Many older posts that should be modded up are simply ignored because the moderators only see the ones that have already been modded up.

    Having said all that, for the most part the mod system works. Most of the truly insightful comments end up at the top of the heap and most of the crap gets buried on the bottom where it belongs. It's not perfect, but I'm not sure it can be. That shouldn't stop us (or CT) from improving it if possible, however.

    Lastly, I think we're all (especially Rob) taking this thing waaaay too seriously. Let's lighten up and make this place fun again. Ok?
  • No... must not bite... damn.

    OK, I've never looked at trolltalk. Why should I? Are you saying that if I want to discuss something, I should check first to see if the poster means it? For everyone who trolls there's someone else who thinks like it, so it's pointless trying to separate the two.

    As for the rest of your trolling :)

    I drink lager, and so does every rugby player I know. Beck's, Stella, Kronenberg & Heineken, just for the record. I own neither a Ben Sherman shirt, Armani jeans, or a beer belly. And I'm 21. And I'm not cynical, I admit; I'd rather have an intelligent discussion on /. rather than wreck it. Quite how you get a laugh out of that I don't understand. If you don't like /., why do you waste so much of your life posting to it?

    Me and my like? How many Linux-using rugby players do you know then?

    No score+1 bonus because I'm talking bollocks :)
    ---
  • Unfortunately, I won't be able to be there tonight, as I have yet to aquite a computer at my apartment. I'm confined to reading /. at work at the moment.

    However... I've been reading /. for some months now, and I have yet to moderate. I have been waiting (patiently, IMHO) for such a time to come, but so far it hasn't. I've tried to meta moderate, but it tells me I haven't been here long enough (and yes, I have "willing to moderate" set to the correct setting).

    Here is an issue I have with the system. I don't have a terrible amount to say. I read here every day, and most articles, but I post only when I find something I'm knowledgable on, or have strong opinions about, and even then, I won't post if someone has already said what I'm going to say. Those are times when what I would like to do is mod that person up, to show my agreement. I think my karma is like two, simply because I don't post that often.

    Anyway, I just wanted to throw my two cents into the pool. Have fun tonight, wish I could be there.

    Joshua
  • With the Karma Kap in place it is more useless than if it wasn't displayed.

    What good is a counter that only goes down with Troll Metamoderation(tm).

    I'm all for hiding it if it's useless

  • by Tridus ( 79566 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:47AM (#729388) Homepage
    1. AFAIK, no cap for some people is just a rumor, unless its a bug. (a bug in slashcode?? never! ;-) )

    2. Some people do read the faq (like me, I'm weird that way). One idea I've heard is to create a section for things like Slashdot news and changes that aren't big enough to make the front page. That way, people who are actually interested in changes can read them, and otherwise they don't fill up the main page (or not get posted at all for fear of filling up the main page).

    3. I have no idea. Overrated and Underrated are pretty hard to metamod though, because you have to know the original score to know if the overrated is actually fair. Over/Underrated do seem to be a good way for trolls with modpoints to get around the system though, so maybe something could be worked out?

    4. In the infamous CT/Sig11 irc log floating around, this actually came up. The problem is that they see suggestions that have already been throught up a few hundred times before, and I guess they just have a hard time replying to them over and over and over again. The suggestions actually have to fall into a pretty narrow set of limits to be even considered too, because of issues like server/database load.
  • 1) WTF is up with Karma? First, no cap, then a cap. Now I hear rumors of no cap, but only for some people.

    You've heard something about a cap? I've heard nothing -- all I know is that my Karma (a large 2-digit number) hasn't been increasing, despite recent moderation to my posts. And personally, I like knowing my karma and seeing it increase -- it motivates me to post better comments, and let the half-assed stuff slide.

    2) When you change things, please, for the love of GOD, TELL US

    Agreed!

    --Jim
  • by TheReverand ( 95620 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:52AM (#729391) Homepage
    You can blame trolls all you want to, but that doesn't fix the moderation system. The fact that any troll can get moderated up to 5 in a matter of minutes is proof that it does not work.

    All trolls (note, not spammers, not anonymous Emily Dickinson, not Penis Bird Man) have done is played devils advocate and forced people to think about what they are posting. In fact, I am considered a "troll" because I don't believe open source is the way to go. So what? I disagree, big deal. But that makes me a "troll" around here. I gladly accept the title.

    Allow me to quote one of the "Troll Manifestos"

    But for Trolls, it's more than just parody of the webpage. In fact, in many respects, Trolls don't care for the very web page in which they operate. For Trolls , as well as for many other readers of the page, Slashdot itself has become too self-important and too self-congratulatory. Its hosts take on extremist viewpoints merely to keep pageviews high... from posters who often just parrot whatever CmdrTaco says. Worse yet, Slashdot believes it makes a difference in the issues, when it rarely if ever does. And perhaps worst of all... if it's on the internet, people believe it as an absolute truth, despite the fact that most of what's on Slashdot is simply opinion. What Trolls do on Slashdot manage to demonstrate that rather accurately, each and every day.

    This website would be nothing but a bunch of zealots shouting "Me Too" at everything taco posts, were it not for the trolls.

    Sorry, but I have been reading /. for about 2 years now, and have watched the quality in comment response drop steadily. The only thing that has improved has been the quality of trolls.

  • by Millennium ( 2451 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:52AM (#729392)
    In any physical society, a person can generally get a good feel for his/her reputation simply by watching how people react to him. On huge virtual societies like Slashdot, you can't do this, because you only have one measure of reaction: the written word. There's far more to seeing your reputation than what people say to you, particularly in a community so large that very few people speak on a regular basis within its confines.

    Karma can be used, among other things, as a measure of your reputation on Slashdot (a very crude and rough measure, yes, but a measure nonetheless). If you find your Karma going up, it's a pretty safe bet that you're well-liked by the community. If it's going down, then you're not doing so well (unless you're a troll, in which case you're doing quite well). If you're serious about being a good Slashdotter and you see your Karma going down, you know that you need to find out what's going on and take steps to correct it. You can't get this otherwise. Posting histories are unreliable because the score is bounded (I could be modded down 50 times on a single post and lose 50 Karma, but the score on the post would remain at -1). Looking at reactions is also unreliable, because people don't always post their reactions (remember, moderators cannot post reactions in a thread they mod at all, or their moderation is undone).

    So it's still necessary to at least give people the option to know what their Karma is.
    ----------
  • I suppose you also think that when men say, "Work's a bitch!", they're referring to female dogs exclusively. There is an incredible amount of misogynism in our language, both latent and overt. It is undeniable that "sucks" refers to fellatio; the only question is whether it is F-M fellatio or male homosexual fellatio. Either way, it's misogynistic, since it's the fear of men becoming like women that fuels homophobia.
  • I have several.

    1. Limit the # of posts per user more than it is now.

    2. Eliminate Karma as a cumulative system.

    3. Limit the # of posts per story. We shouldn't need a (-1 redundant) tag.

    I have more, and I will be there at 9 est. to share them don't you worry.

  • Two points, Michael:

    1) No, it's trolls like me. OS isn't a troll, AFAIK, and I know most of 'em

    2) If it's "making it suck" that we're talking about, I'd appreciate you pointing me to the URL of an instance in which a troll has posted a blatantly inaccurate or self-serving story. I stopped feeling guilty about trolling the day that you guys posted "Hotmail Set to Collapse Under Load" as the title of a story about them moving a few servers to W2K. When you pull shit like that on the main page, you kind of lose your right to complain when other people do the same thing on the threads.

    On the other hand, at least we don't have to listen to Emmett Plant's self-absorbed whinings any more, so hurray for that.

  • >[...]Sig11 [...], please god, let him show up for this. It would ruin Taco's night

    Dunno, having read the log before, I think Taco really gets off tormenting sig11 and sig seems to get pretty peevish about it all.

    I have to admin, sig's top-page article on k5 the other day was pretty interesting, although I can see where his constant whining and badgering about improving slash to eliminate this 'groupthink' pet peeve of his gets under taco's skin after a while.

    I think everyone who is interested should read the log and decide for themselves. It is a facinating insight into sig and taco.

    I think sig raises some valid issues but I tend to agree with taco that the system mostly works for the benefit of the of the majority. No one claims it's perfect, not sure it can be or even needs to be. Could it be better? Sure. Is it so broke right now that other things that need to be done everyday to run the site should be stopped. Doesn't seem like it to me.

    Just a highlight to entice you to look at the log linked above:

    [20:55] <CmdrTaco> You quitting proves that the karma kap worked. The most annoying of the whores shut up.
    [20:56] <Signal_11> Just leave me alone, Rob... I've had enough for one week.
    [20:57] <CmdrTaco> Sig:I've had to deal with your childish crap for 3 years. You can handle 10 sentances of IRC slapping ;)
    [20:58] <CmdrTaco> Signal 11 thinks he is the reason for moderation, for mete moderation, and for jesus.
    [20:59] <CmdrTaco> I work all day, you just fucking troll websites. That definitely qualifies you as an expert.
    [21:01] <CmdrTaco> Oh, shit! Dark Angel!
    [21:01] * CmdrTaco is away: dark angel.
    [21:02] <Signal_11> He comes in, slams me, then walks out to watch TV. what's WRONG with this picture...

    Some of this may be out of context, read the whole thing. (I didn't try to intentionally slant it, but it probably looks that way.) Very interesting.

  • You can blame trolls all you want to, but that doesn't fix the moderation system. The fact that any troll can get moderated up to 5 in a matter of minutes is proof that it does not work.

    The site depends upon user moderation. If the users want to moderate up crap, there is NO moderation system that will stop that.

    I lump trolls and spammers together. Most trolls spam. Most spammers troll. They feed off each other. I see little distinction.

    Trolls don't care for the very web page in which they operate...

    Exactly. They're purposefully destructive. Nothing noble or honorable about that.
    --
    Michael Sims-michael at slashdot.org
  • 1) I'm not a troll.

    2) But getting insulted directly by Slashdot editors is exactly the kind of thing that might turn me into one.
    --
  • oops, I previewed and still the html got munched, the link is here. [kuro5hin.org]
  • Holy shit, up to a score:4? Wow, most of the moderators must be very desperate these days. I know I ... uh, never mind. Um. Yeah.
  • very good point. I just noticed this too.

    --
  • We *depend* on users to moderate accurately...
    But they don't. That's the core of the problem. Anyway, I'm sure a lot of people browse at +1 or higher even when moderating, which would explain why so many good AC comments stay at 0. while non-AC trolls (often) get +5 Insightful.

    Personally, I think it would be much better to get rid of the current mod system altogether and implement something akin to the article scoring in some of the newsreaders like strn. Let me choose my own scores, based on the people I know I like to read, and apply those scores automatically when I request an article. Sure, some people will refuse to read anyone who disagrees with them, but that's their problem, not yours, and one you can't solve anyway. At least it isn't a problem for everyone else the way bad moderation is.

    ...meta-mod is a partial solution only.
    Meta-moderation isn't even a partial solution; it's just the first step in an infinite regression. Who moderates the meta-moderators? I meta-moderate every day; if even 5% of the users did similarly, there's no way you could be reviewing them all.
  • Show me a constructive suggestion amongst the complaints... then we'd have something to listen to.

    Well you could start by rereading the post you called a troll. Beyond that:

    • More openness - When changes are made in how the site operates, tell us! Karma caps, 1x1 transparent GIFs...explain what's happening and why instead of only issuing denials and disclaimers after the trolls have been spinning conspiracy theories. Change Geeks In Space to a general Slashdot section.
    • More responsibility - Read the article you link to or at least apply a little common sense before posting. Did that article really say that Microsoft invented the symlink? Do you seriously think that Outlook makes mail unreadable on non-MS served systems and no one noticed until now? And, no, the fact that the wording is quoted from the submission doesn't make it OK. That's what editors are for.
    • Less trolling by the editors - I'm talking about real trolling, not spamming. Posting yet another KDE vs. RMS article that can only cause more hostility, referring to "resident gasbag Jon Katz" -- that's textbook trolling.
    • Less foolishness - If the site is going to espouse an ideology, first stop pretending otherwise. Second, at least sort out what it is. You're for the GPL but against copyrights. You're against people fighting domain names that are similar to their own trademarks, unless they're fighting Microsoft in which case you're on their side. At least come up with something that makes sense.
  • Show me a constructive suggestion amongst the complaints... then we'd have something to listen to.

    Well you could start by rereading the post you called a troll. Beyond that:

    • More openness - When changes are made in how the site operates, tell us! Karma caps, 1x1 transparent GIFs...explain what's happening and why instead of only issuing denials and disclaimers after the trolls have been spinning conspiracy theories. Change Geeks In Space to a general Slashdot section.
    • More responsibility - Read the article you link to or at least apply a little common sense before posting. Did that article really say that Microsoft invented the symlink? Do you seriously think that Outlook makes mail unreadable on non-MS served systems and no one noticed until now? And, no, the fact that the wording is quoted from the submission doesn't make it OK. That's what editors are for.
    • Less trolling - I'm talking about real trolling, not spamming. Posting yet another KDE vs. RMS article that can only cause more hostility, referring to "resident gasbag Jon Katz" -- that's textbook trolling.
    • Less foolishness - If the site is going to espouse an ideology, first stop pretending otherwise. Second, at least sort out what it is. You're for the GPL but against copyrights. You're against people fighting domain names that are similar to their own trademarks, unless they're fighting Microsoft in which case you're on their side. At least come up with something that makes sense.
  • by e_lehman ( 143896 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @08:39AM (#729423)

    Taco works his butt off to maintain this site, and people do nothing but ream him. I think I'm a pretty average Slashdot reader, and you know what?

    • I can decrypt text with incorrect grammar and spelling all by myself. I know this, because a lot of you writing (even insightful ones) comments can't spell worth a damn.
    • I read at +2 and skip my eyeballs right on past posters that bore me. The moderation system doesn't have to be perfect; I can do some filtering all by myself.
    • When there's a redundant story, I skip it. When there's an erroneous story, the comments tell me, and I forget it. When there's a spurrious comment in an article, I blow it off.

    Why is everything Rob's problem and responsibility? Why is it entirely his job to get everything just all tidy and perfect for pampered little you? Has someone tied you up and forced you to read Slashdot? And, if so, is she good looking?

    How about this bit from the IRC log?

    [21:47] [CmdrTaco] Some days I just go home so fucking angry because some dickless wonder with no information and a paranoid fantasty is convinced that I'm the antichrist.,

    [21:48] [CmdrTaco] Its great when someone uses a forum that you work so hard to create & maintain to attack you

    I wonder what it feels like to work your butt off 10 hours a day and still get dozens of emails a day, every day telling you what a dick you are? I wouldn't take a job like that. And, as far as I know, there's nothing preventing Rob, Jeff, Michael, and co. from saying, "screw this abuse" and dumping Slashdot tomorrow. What do you want from these guys?

  • If I'm not mistaken, the log will be aviable later on the SlashNet-FTP at ftp://ftp.slashnet.org/pub/slashnet/ for ums/ [slashnet.org].

  • Well... one issue with that is that the system is currently designed to enable someone to view every post no matter how crappy, if that is what they want to do.

    Unless you make -2 a normally browsable level, you take that away. And if you make -2 browsable, you've just defeated the whole purpose, because then it just replaces what -1 is supposed to be, the black hole of posts.
  • Thats what happens when its written by a self-confessed "perl junkie" originally. :-)

    I mean really, if I were going to write somethig like this, it'd be written in ASP (vbscript) and talking to MS-SQL through OLEDB and ADO, because thats what I'm most comfortable with. I could do it in other things, but remember the context /. started in.

    It didn't start out with any plan to be as big as it is now, it was a couple of people doing something for fun. Back then, the choice of perl probably made perfect sense, especially since thats what they wanted to use. (just like back then I would have done it in ASP, in that context it makes perfect sense)

    They don't seem to want to rewrite the whole thing into another language, but the code is out there for somebody else to do it if they want to.
  • I, too, rarely make use of IRC and will not be online tonight. . . .

    5) During the infamous CT/S11 IRC discussion, the topic of scoring behavior was brought up. Specifically, the difference between Slashdot (which sums ratings to compute a comment's score) and Kuro5hin (which averages ratings to compute a comment's score) was pointed out.

    In my opinion, this is a very crucial difference between the two systems. I also believe that the Kuro5hin system is much more accurate at capturing readers' ratings of a comment.

    Both CommanderTaco and Hemos emphasized strongly that the load of computing averages would break their server. I am confused at this; there is a simple way of updating averages. The current scheme looks like this:

    score = score + diff

    In order to update an average, it can be computed at the time of the moderation action using the following logic:

    score = (score * count + diff) / (count + 1)
    count = count + 1

    (Note that "score" must be stored in floating-point, though it may certainly be rounded for display.) The math at the time of moderation will indeed require a few extra instructions, but this is insignificant; the concern of overhead is at comment display time, which this scheme entirely avoids. Yes, there will be slight rounding error, which should nevertheless not prove significant in the context of moderation.

    My question for CT and Hemos is this: Why (in light of this proposed code) not compute scores using averaging? I see no compelling reason that summation should be used. My personal opinion is that this change (along with hiding karma ;-) would improve comment quality a great deal.

  • Your comments ARE crap. I don't want to hear them, and the vast majority of the /. readership doesn't want to either. If you want to troll, fuck off and find a forum where it'll be tolerated/appreciated.

    Any chance of a poll to *prove* no one likes all the trolling? It's annoying and pointless, and almost never funny.


    ---
  • You can also check out the log of Rob the Big Baby vs. Sig11 the Slightly Less Annoying here [wtower.com].

    - A.P.

    --
    * CmdrTaco is an idiot.

  • Actually there is something inherently noble in pointing out the flaws in the system. You have a link to yro, yet you don't seem to believe that what we do is for the good of /.? Haven't you realized that we all congregate here because we like to be here? Don't you think we want to see this place get better and succeed, as opposed to slowly beginning to wallow in a sea of its own retarded mediocrity?

    There is nothing destructive in posting a thought that disagrees with yours.

    However, picking through a long post and quoting one or 2 lines out of it, is the easy way out.

    But then again, what should I expect? You don't care about the quality of this site. You are just here to increase page views.

    Right?

  • From my point of view, averaging is a terrible idea.

    To me, the most important thing moderation does is pick out intelligent dissenting opinions from the sea of banal groupthink. Averaging moderation would cause the opposite result -- all posts would be ground down by the same flood of of conformity and all double-plus-ungood thoughts that might challenge a Slashdot reader's unswerving faith in Linux, Peacefire and Napster will be hidden down with the goat links.

    If what you want is vigorously enforced conformity, read Advogato [advogato.org]. Before being able to post, members must reach a minimum score on the Scale Of Being Just Like Everyone Else. Personally, I find it much more interesting to read a site where people are allowed to say something in defense of Troll Tech, or even Microsoft.

  • Bullshit, Michael. If Slashdot sucks, it's because of two factors: (1) Overwhelming popularity, and (2) inept management.

    Popularity is obviously involved; the site has probably thousands of regular posters out of its 200k+ accounts; a new story can get 100 comments in less than half an hour. It's impossible for anyone to keep up with it all, and even if the moderation system was basically sensible (which it never has been), it still wouldn't be enough. As it is, the totally broken moderation system does little but encourage conformity and amuse the trolls.

    Management: Two factors here. One, wretched journalism standards, e.g. Taco's report yesterday that Red Hat claimed to have invented Open Source, or the Hotmail debacle that streetlawyer mentioned; two, the moderation system; three, the refusal of management/admins to do anything about it other than whine that it's the fault of the trolls.

    I've been spending a lot of time at Kuro5hin lately. Admittedly, as a less-popular site, it doesn't have Slashdot's popularity problem, by a long shot, but I think as it grows it will do better than Slashdot at retaining the things that make it good. The way that users vote on topics works really well, and the thresholds can be raised as the site becomes more popular, so I think it can scale up fairly gracefully. I'm less enthusiastic about Kuro5hin's comment moderation, but it's no worse than Slashdot's, and arguably better.

    Slashdot's editorial system makes the quality of the site highly dependent on you editors. Of the lot of you, only timothy can be relied on at all to post quality articles. That has more to do with why Slashdot sucks (if it does; hey, I still read it, so obviously I haven't completely given up hope) than any number of trolls.

  • Actually, Michael was involved with YRO stuff (whether it was called that or not) before he started writing for / posting on Slashdot. To say he doesn't care about the quality of the site just isn't fair, not to mention isn't accurate!

    There's a big diff. between "posting a thought that disagrees with yours" (which is fine) and letting people intentionally detract from others' happiness. It's grafitti vs. earpoking. The fact that the people who wrote the code for the site and risked the uncertainty of making it work full time are still around and in fact care *deeply* about the site is pretty impressive to me. Not all of them want to have the floor constanly peed on.

    An easy-sounding fix for anyone who reading troll posts would be an option that says "view trolls" and an option for posters to honestly label their posts "This is a troll."

    Or at least that's how I see it.

    timothy

  • right here [slashnet.org]
  • Hrm. I find myself in that position at the present. I have a high enough karma to have the +1 bonus, yet I still haven't moderated. I also probably run the same posting pattern. Heck, I think I have the majority of my karma points from providing /. with good stories on space (but that's only because I work inside the industry, heh). Which raises the question: how long ya gotta be around before you can moderate?
    --
  • ROFLMAO. I can't believe I have an imposter. Good one. :-)

    For the record, no, the above isn't me. Damn, I don't need to make a Bruce Perens .sig now, do I?

    --
    There is no K5 [kuro5hin.org] cabal.

  • "What do you want from these guys?"

    A little professionalism.

    Your argument was perfectly valid before this:
    The Rest © 1997-2000 OSDN.

    This isn't just some guys' hobby anymore.

    -nme!
  • Last I heard, karma was capped at 50.

    Seeing as how I'm not there, this is not first hand information. :-)
  • by RudeSka ( 102605 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @07:10AM (#729456) Homepage
    I do not want to come off as a karma whore, but I will give sexual favors to anyone who mods this up.
  • We could all compare karma. Why don't you tell me then? My karma has stayed well above the +1 bonus for a long time, ditto for StreetLawyer and others. We keep getting modded up. Someone likes what we post. That's for sure.

    But it must be the Microsoft/Troll contingence who hang around with mod points and waits for us to troll.

    Right?

  • I lump trolls and spammers together. Most trolls spam. Most spammers troll. They feed off each other. I see little distinction. Then you haven't been paying attention. Really, Michael, if you want to come down off of Olympus, you should show demonstrate a little better understanding of how your own system works, and the sub-cultures it has created. Take a little time out of your busy schedule to read the inchfan, or browse at -1 and realize that there are vast differences between the spammers and the trolls.
    It's sequences of posts like these that make me want to start fresh sometimes...
    ~luge
  • Karma is capped at 50. Currently if your karma is 50 or greater, it cannot increase.
    --
    Michael Sims-michael at slashdot.org
  • by streetlawyer ( 169828 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @07:16AM (#729463) Homepage
    I never said my actions were justifiable on any grounds other than the very best one; that they're funny.

    And my comments aren't crap -- I weight them on purpose to maintain constant Karma, and the ones which bring me down (usually by defending the concept of copyright in terms only slightly more vitriolic than the Slashbots attack it) are always much, much better than the ones which bring me up.

    You need me. And people like me. We keep the arguments going which bring in the page views and return visitors which keep your page views up. People will come and post "DMCA SUCKS!" to a copyright story, or "If this was Open Source, it would never have crashed", but they'll only post it once. It takes someone who tells them they're wrong to bring them back.

    I've contributed a fair old amount to your site, Mike, all of it under the streetlawyer identity (unlike a few other bigtime trolls, I have no alter ego). I contributed one of your April Fool jokes this year. This morning I submitted a story warning you about how a prominent geek site could be used to bring cross-site scripting vulnerabilities to your bulletin boards. I'm happy to play along with you. But I'm not going to play along with your legion of little me-toos and catamites. I'm not going to agree with your own dangerously naive political views. And, while you provide me with this bulletin board (which is to say; forever; you have no economic alternative), I'm not going to stop saying that you, personally, and your followers, collectively, are frequently full of shit, and doing so in as amusing (to myself) a way as possible.

    Oh yeh, and I don't do IRC either.

  • by Inoshiro ( 71693 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @07:39AM (#729464) Homepage
    Confirmed. As an @ of #kuro5hin, and knowing the regulars, I can firmly say that unless some alien brainwashing crew visited Australia, Western Europe, most of the US, and Canada, they all witnessed the same Rob Malda. :)

    Too bad I was asleep at the time :-(
    --
  • In fact, some trolls have been clearly labeled "Troll" by their authors. Yet they got modded up anyway, often as "Insightful"! And you guys still think that the moderation system works?
  • Interesting...

    How slash rates your example comment would seem to depend on the order the ratings were given.

    If the post started at 0, we can figure it out like this:
    - Goes to rating 5 (+5)
    - Goes back to 1 (-4)
    - Goes back to 5 (+4)

    There is still a point left. Now you can mod a score 5 post up, and the poster gains karma, but the post can never go over score 5.

    So consider this (same example)
    - Start at score 0
    - Get modded up 10 straight times (score 5, +10)
    - Get modded down 4 times (score 1, -4)

    Now the post shows as score 1, but the poster still gains 6 karma (+10 + -4)

    This is an extremely unlikely example, but you can see the drastic difference order makes in slash vs in an averaging system (where order is meaningless).
  • by yankeehack ( 163849 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:19AM (#729471)
    So I'm guessing that you aren't expecting many slashdotters to follow the Vice Presidential debates tonight at 9pm EST??? ;-)
  • And I'm not cynical, I admit; I'd rather have an intelligent discussion on /. rather than wreck it.

    Let's review the facts. You want to have an intelligent conversation on Slashdot, and Streetlawyer has told you that you've been trolled in the past. Can you see that the two are not mutually exclusive?

    If nothing else, engaging one of the 'good' trolls here (the ones who get moderated up and frequently have decent if not flawed arguments) does wonders for your own online conversation. They will force you to back up your statements, face your opinions and basically be absolutely certain you know what you are talking about, or your post will be shredded on the followup. Don't mistake that there often is quite a bit of useful info posted in response to even the most blatant, obvious trolls. It's even quite possible, easy in most cases to win the argument against one, regardless of whether you've lost the game.

    All I'm saying is that you should realize that troll postings do have a certain usefulness, regardless of their irritation factor. If they bother you then simply don't respond, and the troll will either go way, or come back with something a bit more useful to the conversation. Think about it.

    Fist Prost

    "We're talking about a planet of helpdesks."
  • But when I want to post something non-anonymously that I don't think would benefit others to read, I disable the +1 and post at just plain 1.

    If you don't think it would benefit others to read, why would you bother posting it in the first place?

  • I pray, beg, and plead with the Slashdot community for something here.<br><br>
    I will not be able to catch the IRC chat tonight, so I hope someone is decent enough to fully log it.<br><br>
    And if Sig11 is still out there, please god, let him show up for this. It would ruin Taco's night, and be great fun for the rest of us.<br><br>
    Wanna know why I ask this? Click <a href="http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=00/10/04 /1852239&threshold=-1&commentsor t=0&mode =nested&cid=12">here</a> to witness a conversation and a previous IRC log about Taco and trolls and karma whores (OH MY!).
  • I hope you were talking about how mature you weren't being in your original reply. This reply isn't very mature, either.

    On slashdot, your glass house has long since been destroyed.

    If you don't understand it, please don't reply.


    ---
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate [ncsu.edu].
  • I'm not terribly familiar with the K5 system, so I'm curious about something...

    Can everybody rate posts?

    If everybody can rate posts, then here at /. you could quickly run into a problem of trolls simply rating everything in reverse. Then we run into the same problem we have now, needing more good people rating then bad ones (right now we need more good moderators vs bad ones for the system to work).

    If we end up with a lot of troll accounts that simply rate everything badly no matter what, then we would need some kind of way of rating the raters to weed out the bad ones, which is what MetaModeration does right now.

    So what would happen is only certain people would be allowed to rate, and we end up with a system very similar to the one we have now, except for some different math.
  • I haven't been following any of the backchannel troll sites lately- can someone post, or post a link to, (or mail to me) the IRC log that I've seen mentioned here? I'm very interested in moderation (not just /.'s, but other places as well) and I'm curious as to what the two of them had to say.
    Thanks...
    ~luge
  • 3. Not really. Say I make a post thats good, but not great.

    Now for some bizzare reason, it gets modded up to 5, when there is no way its ever worth that. But its not flamebait, its not a troll, its not redudant, offtopic, etc. Now if a person mods down a good post as flamebait, that person will get destroyed in meta-moderation.

    Thats where overrated is useful, its for dropping a post from 5 that doesn't deserve to be there without calling it a troll post.

    4. Maybe they just haven't updated it lately. It might be a good idea for some of us to log tonights chat and create some new FAQ entries from it for them (as was suggested in the story actually :-) ). I know when I was running a discussion board sometimes the last thing I wanted to do was update the FAQ, so its hard to blame them.
  • Shift gears. You say you want slashdot to get better? Okay, give me your plan for making it better.

    Well, the initial post by me that you responded to was modded down as a troll.

    Why don't you tell me?

  • Now, on to the meat of my comment. ASCII is not acceptable as evidence in a court of law, and I hope the slashdotters won't accept it either. I could have written that entire log myself. Mind you, I didn't.

    Another version is available on kuroshin [kuro5hin.org]. Now I have no idea how many people have access to this server, but if I were rusty I wouldn't want to tarnish my domain's reputation by posting a fake.

    And according to the log, he was on the channel at that time.

    That being said, I praise your skepticism. The conspiracy nuts must be going crazy right now (no wait, they are already)

  • by dboyles ( 65512 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @07:30AM (#729492) Homepage
    Of all the mods I get, "overrated" is nearly half of them. Nobody is keeping moderators who use those options in line.

    I moderate as "overrated" a pretty good bit when I have moderator access. In the last month I've been posting to /. a lot more, and as a result have attained the +1 bonus on my posts. But when I want to post something non-anonymously that I don't think would benefit others to read, I disable the +1 and post at just plain 1.

    I usually read /. at a +2 threshold and decent into a discussion if I want (unless I'm moderating, when I read at 0, nested). I read at +2 and sort by highest scores first because sometimes I just want to pop in and get a few interesting opinions on a subject. I don't want to see 30 posts at +2 that are just somebody's one-liner comeback buried down in a thread. From what I've read in the /. FAQ and what I believe to be true, this is why "overrated" is in there. I'm not sure about "underrated" though, because if it's underrated then it should be marked as what it is (funny, insightful, informative...).

    There are plenty of flaws with the moderation system, but it does a decent job of filtering out bad comments. I'll be interested to see this IRC chat session tonight and the effects of it, especially considering the recent Signal 11 brouhaha.
  • We keep getting modded up. Someone likes what we post. That's for sure.

    I dunno. Maybe it's all the trolls modding each other up? All the newbies not realising it's a troll post? Of course, there's a wide range of what could constitute trolling, and sometimes it can be... sort of funny. Not very often though.

    Perhaps there could be a checkbox (like 'post anon') that said 'I am trolling', with the user option to turn off viewing these posts. We would soon see how many people appreciated the trolls. But of course, that would defeat the whole point of trolling, which as far as I can tell is to annoy everyone.


    ---
  • by TOTKChief ( 210168 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:22AM (#729499) Homepage

    Since I'll be on the road to visit my family and haven't gotten the heads-up display/satellite Internet connection in my truck to work yet, let me just ask this:

    Can Hemos and CmdrTaco please tell us why going private with karma won't work in the long run?

    All the comments I've seen about this include "we'll get 1000's of emails" and "people want to know their karma". I posit that people knowing their karma is a bad thing. It's not like some deity lets us know how many good and bad points we've got in this world.

    <><
    --

  • I agree: karma is a nice thing to have around. I'm a relatively new user (note my just-under-200K luser id) and I have found that increasing karma is a good incentive to both read and contribute to /. discussions. As a result I've learned quite a bit. Without Karma I might have just clicked pretty widgets to kill time, or gone somewhere else.

    Of course after a certain point everyone gets capped at 50 these days, so it loses its meaning. But so what? After you get to 50, you're probably already hooked. If you aren't, then you probably won't be.

  • by OlympicSponsor ( 236309 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:25AM (#729506)
    So could someone ask these questions:

    1) WTF is up with Karma? First, no cap, then a cap. Now I hear rumors of no cap, but only for some people.

    2) When you change things, please, for the love of GOD, TELL US. Don't just break it (from our point of view). And forget about that FAQ--no one reads it. Just post a story like you used to.

    3) Is Slashdot still depending on metamod? If so, why the heck are "overrated" and "underrated" still allowed without being metamodded? Of all the mods I get, "overrated" is nearly half of them. Nobody is keeping moderators who use those options in line.

    4) Is there any point in us suggesting new features (mod-related or not) or is your mind totally closed on the topic? It used to be that you would respond to good ideas with a comment and sometimes even an implementation. Nowadays we keep suggesting but Slashdot keeps sucking.
    --
  • >I used to value my Karma, but I really don't anymore. It's just a number.

    I agree. The whole karma system was kind of interesting at first to see some kind of tangible feedback to your comments. Getting the bonus point and being able to moderate and watching your posts to see if they are replied to and/or moderated added a little something to /.

    But now it becomes this little game that some people play to mess with others and to attach a number to their self-worth. I agree that sig appears to attach _way_ too much importance to slashdot and it appears to be out of some need to validate himself.

    From his user-page:

    It seems my lasting legacy on Slashdot is in the moderation system.

    I think when he was the "poster boy for the moderation system" he got a sense of self-importance. When Taco somewhat neutralized the karma issue by placing the cap, it took away some of sig's impact here and with that he decided to move over to K5 where seems to want to rebuild his status and standing. More power to him.

    He also mentions the old bitchslapping incident:

    When Malda's solution to unfair moderation was the "bitchslap" - a practice whereby someone's karma is set to -50, and their default posting score to -1, was first used, I spoke with some of the people who it had happened to. People accused me of being the cause. After a lot of research and talking to Rob, I managed to get a couple of those accounts placed back at 0 karma and they were able to post again and be seen. Nobody really bothered to thank me.

    For the record, I was one of the ones who got my account crippled [fishstick.hey.to] for moderation abuse. I didn't blame him, but I also didn't thank him for having anything to do with getting this account restored. I did that on my own by e-mailing Taco. All sig appeared to do was misrepresent the facts of the matter.

    Karma doesn't/shouldn't really matter. Having something interesting to say should.

  • by IntlHarvester ( 11985 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @09:49AM (#729510) Journal
    Right -- Karma was introduced as a "reputation system" to help readers seperate the good posters from the bad.

    Then Karma was hidden from other users, so you couldn't see anyone's reputation even if you wanted to. If they had over 25, you could see their +1 bonus, however. You could still see your own karma to judge how your own reputation was doing.

    Then pretty much anyone here longer than a couple months figured out the "formula" to get 25 karma points. Garbage at score 2 has become common, so the +1 bonus became meaningless.

    Then Karma was 'kapped' at 50, so the people who have been here a long time can't use it as a relative measure anyway.

    Don't get me wrong -- I'm not arguing against the Karma Kapping or Karma Hiding or Karma Bonuses -- I'm just wondering, with all of these modifications, what is the point of Karma at all these days?

    Karma came in after the moderation system -- Slashdot did not always have it. My feeling was the S/N ratio was higher in the days before Karma, and people would actually post and read at the AC level. The readership has gone way up and the quality has generally gone down, but in general moderation has worked, but I don't know if anyone can honestly say that Karma has worked at all.

    So since Karma been rendered largely pointless, and has been a contentious problem for some folks, why not get rid of Karma all together? If you must have a +1 bonus, do it purely on seniority (just like Mod and MetaMod privs). Just a thought.


    --
  • I lump trolls and spammers together. Most trolls spam. Most spammers troll. They feed off each other. I see little distinction.

    Happily, a good number of the /. crew seems to have much more of a clue than you do.

    In any case, go through the DB, and look at the following two groups of accounts:

    Group 1: Magenta syringe, Penis Bird Man, Vladinator.

    Group 2: Jon Erikson, streetlawyer, vertical-limit.

    Please point at examples of spam from the second group, and/or examples of genuine trolls in the first one.

    You simply don't know what you're talking about, don't you?

  • To both of you:

    My user number is less than 80,000. I have been active at /. since I arrived (not TOO many postings, but I have had 2 stories on the front page, and metamod almost every day. Guess how manay times I have become a moderator.

    3 times.

    Almost 2 years, I believe. Don't expect too much unless you post and get modded up a _lot_.
  • CmdrTaco talks about this in the infamous #Kuro5hin IRC log. He (understandably) wants to read every single question asked about /. He wants to know what we think. That's admirable as hell. After all the shit people have given Rob, I'm happy he still gives a hoot.

    I'd suggest, though, that one person can't do it all. There are many /.ers who've been around for a dog's age--let them answer some questions. If it were well-moderated--the Catch-22 in this--CmdrTaco, Hemos and the gang could read at 3, 4, or 5 and be fine. Me, I'd probably read that at 5, just because I don't know enough to code my way out of a wet sack of beans.


    --
  • Interestingly, elsewhere in this thread, you've said that Slashdot's moderation is a good thing. Now you say that there should be an end to the "karma game". What ideas do you have in mind for this? Allowing moderation, but not accumulating it on a per-user basis as "karma"? Or simply not displaying one's karma score? Do you want to get rid of the +1 bonus too?
  • Hell, I haven't meta-modded yet either. Keeps telling me I haven't been here long enough. =)
    --
  • i'm going to be running a client in the channel tonight to log the whole thing, and i'll post it for everybody else after it's done. my nick will be gtx (with moo_cow as an alternate nick), so if you notice i'm not doing anything, I'M LOGGING THE CHANNEL FOR THOSE OF US WHO CANT BE THERE. Please don't kick me. email me at loondoogy@hotmail.com if you want a copy, i'l try to post them publicly on the WWW tomorrow. -gtx
  • by talesout ( 179672 ) on Thursday October 05, 2000 @06:29AM (#729522) Homepage
    I hope a pray that Sig11 manages to make it there. For anyone that's interested in improving Slashdot, witness this conversation (with links to the originally discussed IRC log).

    Click here [slashdot.org].

    Signal 11 didn't deserve all of the crap that Taco threw his way, but what do you expect? Egomaniacal garbage seems to be a big turn on for him. Don't believe me? Read the IRC log, he compares Slashdot to Microsoft by saying, "It's like Microsoft. They're popular so everybody dumps on them, ra, ra!" And he doesn't realize that makes him look just as fricken egotistical as Gates.

Be sociable. Speak to the person next to you in the unemployment line tomorrow.

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