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Introduction
I don't normally like posting about internal Steemit matters but I think this is an important issue that has been a problem since the very start.
One of the central problems with Steemit is that of curation.
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Too many writers and not enough readers/curators?
It seems everyone wants to write articles and create posts but few people want to read them, let alone actively curate content.
We have a fundamental economic problem here - there are too many producers and not enough "real" consumers.
Further there is an even greater scarcity of one of the most important types of consumers i.e. the active curator.
In my opinion, high quality active curation is of equal importance to good quality writing and content production.
They are two sides of the same equation.
We need to have good content rise to the top - or at the very least to do better than spam.
Everyone is time starved and if we want to attract more readers to consume the content they need to be able to find it.
Sadly it seems there is little incentive to carry out actual active curation.
Why is this?
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Why work hard when you don't have to?
1)Real curation requires a lot of work and effort.
You have to search through huge amounts of crap and spam to find the odd gem. This can take hours of work and it is not guaranteed you will find anything truly valuable. You are searching for the proverbial needle in a haystack and it requires a lot of effort. So people stop bothering, they vote either randomly or tactically, neither of which involves what most people would consider true curation. I think we have all fallen into this trap and to be honest it is to be expected as the current economic system encourages it.
2)The reverse auction system actually rewards the using of bots.
This has been discussed many times before. The reverse auction was created to discourage bots claiming the majority of rewards by immediately voting on new posts. However it may actually disincentivise people voting manually. The cognitive load of calculating whether you should vote or not based on the timing is an extra hassle for people.
3)There is little reward in curation unless you have a massive stake.
Unless you have a whale level account there is little to be gained from actual curation. Further if you are a whale it doesn't really matter if you curate or not since you vote will likely be large enough to create a bandwagon/swarming effect on a particular post. If you vote for anything often enough others will notice and you will become a "good curator".
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If you need to be a whale to make decent returns why would the average user bother curating?
This is not because you chose good content, but because others will follow after your vote in an attempt to gain curation rewards.
One solution might be if you are a good curator you should buy a massive stake and that way you will profit from it.
This would work if all good curators had the money to put behind and back their curation efforts but just because you have a lot of money does not make you a good curator.
The Albert Einstein of curators may be out there but without the financial means to be a whale there would be little incentive for him to use his talents on Steemit.
Further as I mention above if you are a whale you can make any content become successful due to the bandwagon effect, so why would you bother to work to find good content when you don't have to?
In fact you may still be better of spending your time writing posts rather than actively curating. So we go back to the lack of incentive to curate versus writing.
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Things are not perfect for writers but they do get a larger share of the reward pool.
4)Only 25% of post rewards go to curators.
I'm not sure how much actual difference it would make if there was a 50:50 split, but the current breakdown only serves to emphasise the greater value that is placed on writers vs. curators.
Whether the actual financial difference is big or small, the psychological signal it sends out is that curators are not as important as content creators.
There are also likely other issues that disincentivise manual curation that I haven't even thought of.
What is the solution?
I would love to say I have some kind of ingenious solution to these issues but I don't.
If it were that simple to find an answer it would already have been implemented. That is not to say that we should not try.
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There are no simple solutions here.
Here are some possibilities for consideration:
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Switch back to 50:50 rewards for curation.
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Remove the self-vote option for posts - or remove curation rewards from self-upvotes. Yes people could game it but why incentivise them to do it?
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Look at extra rewards for top curators. The question is where would they come from - perhaps they could come from the extra 20th witness that was created by the removal of mining. I think it is worth looking at. Curation could be considered mining good content.
These are just a few things to think about and likely have multiple problems that will need to be refined. Even then they may not work.
As has been emphasised many times before Steemit is still a work in progress and we need to test out and iterate things to find out what works best.
Avoiding change paralysis and the problem fixation trap
It should also be considered that there may not be "perfect" answers that solve the situation, but there may be adjustments that make the situation better overall if they are put into practice.
Real life and human interactions are not fixed, ordered systems like computer code and I think it is often a mistake to treat them as if they were.
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Problems should not be a freeze on progress.
This is particularly so on a platform like Steemit/Steem.
One of the big problems I have seen whenever a platform change is suggested is that some people will negate it by highlighting problems.
This makes sense if it refines the solution, however all too often a particular solution is shot down and further discussion closed.
Either the solution is "perfect" or it cannot be used.
I would call this "problem fixation" and it can lead to a form of paralysis because in many cases it does not take account of the magnitude of the solution in comparison to the actual initial problem. People become so fixated on the negatives that they lose sight of the potential gain.
Just because a potential solution could be gamed by bad actors does not mean it will be. Further even if it is one must consider how many people will do it and the real world impact.
A small negative effect is acceptable if the overall gain is larger in magnitude.
For example it would not make sense to take a medication with dangerous side effects to cure a minor illness.
On the other hand if you had terminal cancer you would probably tolerate much more serious side effects because the potential gain (saving your life) would outweigh those negatives.
The real world is often like this. It is a balance of risks and rewards with few "clean" solutions that solve everything.
If we just abandoned every potential solution the moment we found a problem with it we would never make any progress.
Anyway, these are my thoughts on the situation. I think with we should keep exploring ways to improve the platform and discussion is an important part of that.
Thank you for reading
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>Everyone is time starved and if we want to attract more readers to consume the content they need to be able to find it.
This is currently the challenge here on this platform when we produce not just quality but unique content but are not getting seen because we are not paying users, or do not have that whale ability yet. Letting our precious 3-hour masterpiece get drowned in the abyss of new tab. Not for the money, but some people out there deserve to see our content too. We also come here to find like-minded individuals and the right people who will read. It's not their fault if they don't find us, it's just the system. Then the post will become old after 3 hours, just like that. But then we are judged and frowned upon if we use / invest in bots to push our posts / or as a temporary solution to the system. But why don't people frown at those whales who self-upvote or posting the same old topics being recyled everyday on the trending page? I agree with the solution - remove self-upvote. Use rep as a factor for curation and for pushing posts up.
I can see steemit is still in beta, but perhaps there might be other improvements or solutions that need to be done than just having the ability to change the cover photo? lol
Yes, some people gave up complaining as we want more solution here. Some are just in-denial, are here for the community or to showcase their talent. If that is what steemit is all about, then hide the $ sign that taints my fellow writers' mind. And add more features that cater to those who don't write for money such as blogger.com features, tags on our own feed for easy search, filter, custom views, archives, date search. These are more useful improvements than being able to change the cover photo.
Unless we post about positivity, success in life or in steemit, then we get auto upvoted by the whales, otherwise, be ignored if not. Good for those who have regular support, keep inspiring them with those topics so they can keep the money here! :) Unfortunately, some people don't write/live up to other people's expectations.
What's your take on this curation thing going on, rewarding /luring the very talented writers only at the beginning, then being abandoned later? We can't blame these talented new writers for being frustrated in the end when $300 at rep 25, becomes $0.06 at rep 57. Quality content then becomes a myth. Then people judge those who write for the rewards? And the suggestion of the mediocre is to leave the platform, or don't write for the money? Excuse me, we also have our wealth here, cannot be erased from the platform anymore, unlike those who can take their wealth back after 13 weeks.
Here's the good part most people here want to hear, now there are a few people staying for the community and not sacrificing the quality of content (old and new writers here despite losing the drug given to them). For the love of writing, and for the community. I'm staying because I have few readers who curate my content because they genuinely like or read what I create/produce. I appreciate the 0.03 cents, and the engagment. How's that for being positive. :)
Sorry about this, I should have turned this into a post lol. But I don't want to taint my travel memoirs portfolio with anything about steemit's internal matters anymore.
Meanwhile, I'll write away....
{feel free to skip to the bolded section for the more succinct version }
I wonder if some type of penalty for uneven distribution of (upvote) rewards would be possible and, if so, whether that might help with this problem of people choosing 5~10 accounts to spend all their votes on?
Or, better yet, offer some type of curation bonus for spreading votes around to Y (and greater) number of accounts over X period. This would probably require a new type of steem reward pool (call it the "steem curation bonus rewards pool"), that operates a bit differently than the current rewards pool.
I'm picturing a "weekly roundup" of active voting accounts that meet a set of specific parameters over the last seven days, at set seven day intervals, each compared against an "ideal voting distribution" to determine what percentage of that rewards pool is given out, per Steem-Power.
In my mind, the factors to consider are:
1.) how many total votes were cast (over the last week)
2.) how much SP was "spent" in voting
3.) how many separate accounts were voted on, and did those votes meet the arbitrary parameters to "qualify" towards consideration in the bonus (example of such an arbitrary parameter: we could say that if the mean voting weight is X, then all votes of less than Y voting strength aren't considered "eligible" -- this could be determined by a simple division or by use of standard deviation, etc.)?
In my opinion, the ideal conditions for those three parameters would be as follows:
1.) an average of 11 100% upvotes per day, or its equivalent based on some other average upvote (e.g. 22 50% upvotes, 44 25% upvotes, etc.). I settled on this because I've noticed that it takes almost exactly 24 hours to regain all the voting strength from 11 100% upvotes.
2.) This is dependent on the voting account's SP, but in the case that the account has 1,000 SP, the "ideal amount of SP to spend" would be (1,000 * 11) ~ 11,000 per day. Obviously, you don't get the full power of a vote unless you wait for the voting power to fully regenerate to 100%, but the parameters can be set up to just concern over the averages. If the average works out to 11 100% votes per day, then the voting account's SP is weighted at 100% in the curation bonus calculation (SP *1.0).
3.) This is the most subjective factor to consider. In a "perfect world" where every author provides equally valuable content the "fairest" distribution, based on point #1, would be voting on 11 separate accounts per day, or 77 separate accounts per week, each at 100% voting weight, or 22 separate accounts per day, 154 per week, each at 50% voting weight, etc. But, as you and I both know, this isn't that perfect world.
Perhaps the number should be halved to about 35 separate accounts voted on, or more, per week, at *eligible voting strength (to be determined by the aforementioned parameters).
The specific math to make this all work escapes me for a few reasons (1. haven't spent too much time thinking about it and 2. I'm probably not smart enough to come up with it if I did spend a lot of time on it), but the "loose frame" of it should be something as follows:
there are two weighted factors that can both significantly increase or decrease your bonus payout, depending on how you score compared to the other eligible accounts:
1.) ideal SP expenditure
2.) ideal vote distribution
and the formula will look (loosely) like this:
Account SP * [some number between 0 and 1, the better the score on #1, the closer to 1] * [some number between 0 and 1, the better the score on #2, the closer to 1]
The number that comes out in the end is the Steem-Power that is eligible to receive the weekly bonus curation payout.
In other words, if a whale votes very "poorly" (according to the bonus eligibility parameters), he may have very little to no SP that is eligible to receive the rewards from the bonus pool. On the flip side, if there are only a few accounts that score well (receiving two 100% weighted votes in the above calculation), they may receive a healthy SP bonus, despite being relatively low SP accounts.
Is any of this feasible to code into Steem? Would it be too taxing on the system? Would it even do anything to help the with the current curation problems that you've brought up in OP? Is it easily gamed like many of the current curation parameters?
Frankly, I don't know the answer to any of those questions, but I feel like, if the parameters were tweaked just right, this bonus curation reward pool could both breath some life into active curation (with more incentive to do so) and help mold curation behaviors towards something that is healthier and more sustainable, particularly as the number of users grow over time.
Whew, I forgot to breath :)
Sorry about the length. I admit, the idea is half-baked, but I think something good could come of it if the right guy (mind) considers it.
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Bangladesh Northern flood 58 million people affected See terrible
58 lakhs 46 thousand and 620 people have been affected in 30 districts of the country due to heavy rainfall and hailstorms. The death has been 98 people According to the latest data of the Disaster Management Department, this year floods affected 188,558 hectares of cropland.
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Saturday afternoon assistant director of the department. Hafizur Rahman told the media this information. He said, 2 9 99 thousand 754 people have taken shelter in 953 shelters throughout the country. At present, 30 districts are affected by flood.
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He said that in Doha and Nawabganj floods in Dhaka, the flood affected people were affected by 37,510 damages and 8955 families of Dohar and Nawabganj, and complete 125 houses were completely damaged.
Damage:
In the last one week, 18 people were injured in Kurigram, 6 in Lalmonirhat, 2 in Sunamganj, 2 in Netrokona, 8 in Nilphamari, 4 in Gaibandha, 4 in Sirajganj, 30 in Dinajpur, 9 in Jamalpur, 1 in Thakurgaon, 4 in Naogaon, 3 in Jessore, Sherpur 3, Moulvibazar II, Comilla 2, all 98 deaths in all.
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4 lakh 92 thousand 339 houses have been damaged. 45 thousand 752 tube wells have been damaged in the disadvantaged districts.
Poultry has died 55. 25232 educational institutions have been damaged. Two thousand 789 kilometers of roads, 123 bridges and culverts, 280 dams have been damaged.
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According to the control room of the Disaster Management Department, Kurigram, Lalmonirhat, Rangpur, Sylhet, Sunamganj, Netrokona, Rangamati, Nilphamari, Gaibandha, Bogra, Sirajganj, Khagrachari, Dinajpur, Jamalpur, Thakurgaon, Panchagarh, Mymensingh, Brahmanbaria, Rajbari, Naogaon, Joypurhat, There are wide population of Jessore, Moulvibazar, Faridpur, Tangail, Manikganj, Madaripur, Comilla, Sherpur and Dhaka districts. It's a miracle flooded.
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