That would be very nice if true. Let’s not have karma. I’ve never missed it and forgot it was even a thing. I only see downsides overshadowing any upsides (“fun to know”?) with it. Even “trusted account” uses don’t work because karma promotes botting.
I liked karma per post, for some reason “hey, 100 people agreed with what I said” was giving me warm feelings sometimes. I don’t think it’s something to be particularly proud of, but still
Good to know, it’s not something that’s planned but it will be requested to death. Let’s hope some devs are users themselves and aren’t afraid to iterate.
To be honest, now that I think about it, this is absoluetley true. All the people I know that are influencers of some sort are basically no good in life at anything else.
I mean any UI app can calculate it for you. It already lists all your posts and comments… Just add up the numbers. It doesn’t need to be implemented in the Lemmy backend at all.
Does Lemmy not obfuscate vote totals? Bots will abuse that if they don’t obfuscate. Obfuscation allows the site to hobble bots that upvote via preventing them from seeing if their vote was received or not.
People really love their fake internet points. Tracking per-server would be trivial. Gamification works to encourage engagement as has been proven time and time again.
But what is the goal? Gamification does work if your goal is quantity over quality, which it is for many site owners who want big numbers and to push ads. But for Lemmy, the only goal is for people to have a place to engage. People shouldn’t post if they don’t have something meaningful to contribute.
I’m not necessarily against showing stats for users, but we don’t have corporate goals like “engagement”.
Upvotes and downvotes, sure, but actual karma that’s tracked per account, no. I don’t think that’s planned either, but I could be mistaken.
That would be very nice if true. Let’s not have karma. I’ve never missed it and forgot it was even a thing. I only see downsides overshadowing any upsides (“fun to know”?) with it. Even “trusted account” uses don’t work because karma promotes botting.
I liked karma per post, for some reason “hey, 100 people agreed with what I said” was giving me warm feelings sometimes. I don’t think it’s something to be particularly proud of, but still
Good to know, it’s not something that’s planned but it will be requested to death. Let’s hope some devs are users themselves and aren’t afraid to iterate.
Who needs Karma?
Influencers
Just another word for attention whore.
What in the AF is an influencer anyway… I mean, like, really, they’re just attention whores.
My words. Those who can, do. Those who can’t,
teachinfluence.To be honest, now that I think about it, this is absoluetley true. All the people I know that are influencers of some sort are basically no good in life at anything else.
My words.
Why, are you selling it?
Why, are you selling it?
I mean any UI app can calculate it for you. It already lists all your posts and comments… Just add up the numbers. It doesn’t need to be implemented in the Lemmy backend at all.
Does Lemmy not obfuscate vote totals? Bots will abuse that if they don’t obfuscate. Obfuscation allows the site to hobble bots that upvote via preventing them from seeing if their vote was received or not.
Thunder shows it in your profile,but it scrapes it from the instance, there is no such option in the web UI.
People really love their fake internet points. Tracking per-server would be trivial. Gamification works to encourage engagement as has been proven time and time again.
It’s also great to create karma-whores and serial reposters, while discouraging discussion which leads to echo chambers.
Engagement is great, but I prefer quality over quantity.
But what is the goal? Gamification does work if your goal is quantity over quality, which it is for many site owners who want big numbers and to push ads. But for Lemmy, the only goal is for people to have a place to engage. People shouldn’t post if they don’t have something meaningful to contribute.
I’m not necessarily against showing stats for users, but we don’t have corporate goals like “engagement”.