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54

This is actually already in the works. The Announcer / Booster / Publicist triad will behave like other similar badge groups afterwards, e.g. Nice Answer / Good Answer / Great Answer or Notable Question / Famous Question. In particular: The timeframe will not matter anymore. You still get the Famous Question badge if you need two years to pile up 10000 ...


21

If you look at their activity, you see that the badges were also awarded in quick succession (with the order depending on which script ran first). This means that the views would've had to come in rapidly in large volumes that it managed to beat the scripts and bucked the natural pattern of Announcer being awarded first, Booster a few hours/days later ...


15

Your question was linked using your user ID from the on-going Stack Exchange segment on Ars Technica, as the "See also" link under the "Challenge Yourself" answer. Admittedly I'm not entirely sure I get how your post relates to the chosen answer, but it does explain the traffic.


14

Oh, I see what you did. You linked this question (200 views) from this question (19 views). Unfortunately, that's not how it works. There are several problems here: You must link it from the off the network (for example, from Twitter, your blog, or your website). You are linking it from within Stack Overflow; that doesn't count. Secondly, not all 200 ...


11

The criteria for these badges has changed, and there is no more timeframe. Any link you share (outside the StackExchange network) to any question or answer (regardless of when the question was asked or when you posted the link) could potentially earn you the badges. Announcer: Shared a link to a question that was visited by 25 unique IP addresses Booster: ...


10

A more detailed explanation is provided in the Stack Overflow blog post Announcer, Booster, and Publicist Badges for those of you unsure of the specifics of when/where sharing counts towards badges.


10

Only the form of the link provided by Facebook icon Twitter icon Link below question is tracked, Namely: http://{domain}/q/{post-id}/{user-id} No other link form is tracked. Period. It doesn't matter whether incoming visitors have an account or not, what matters is that the IP is unique and the shared link was clicked outside our network.


9

Not entirely answering your question, but we did decide to relax the requirements for these badges: Announcer - Shared a link to a question that was visited by 50 25 unique IP addresses in 2 3 days Booster - Shared a link to a question that was visited by 400 300 unique IP addresses in 3 4 days Publicist - Shared a link to a question that was visited by ...


8

No, but you can make a link that does. Share links for questions and answers look like this: http://stackoverflow.com/q/<question-id>/<user-id> http://stackoverflow.com/a/<answer-id>/<user-id> If you take a question link and add an anchor with the answer id at the end, i.e. ...


8

You're linking these from Stack Overflow to Stack Overflow, as opposed to some website or blog outside the Stack Exchange network to the Stack Exchange network. @SDC: Please, don't use mysql_* functions to write new code. They are no longer maintained and the community has begun deprecation process. See the red box? Instead you should learn about ...


7

Take the link from the link option directly underneath the question and then share this specially tailoured link (it contains your user ID to identify you as the source) pretty much anywhere you like, to encourage other people to visit the link (and thus drive traffic to the site). This could include Facebook, Twitter, any other social networking site or ...


7

First, some facts: Yesterday, Jeff got a Booster badge (silver) for promoting a question on English Language and Usage. At that time, the question was only one (1) day old. Jeff's promotional link must be even younger, by definition. Jeff doesn't have a Publicist badge (gold) on that site yet. Jeff does already have an Announcer badge (bronze) for a ...


5

As it says in the blog post: Each badge can be earned only once, and each must be earned on a different question. Also, the tracked IPs must originate from outside our existing network. http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2010/09/announcer-booster-and-publicist-badges/


5

While I generally applaud the changes to the Announcer/Booster/Publicist badges, I think that the requirement for the Booster badge (300 unique IP addresses) is still out of proportion compared to Announcer (25 IPs) and Publicist (1000 IPs). Right now, 4003 Announcer badges, 186 Booster badges and 93 Publicist badges have been awarded at SO. That is, the ...


5

If anyone had used one of the promotional links (with their user ID in it) the question would appear on the list of users who recently won the Announcer badge. I don't know how popular that blog is, but there is a direct link back to your question at the bottom of the page (mis-labeled "newest questions tagged jquery – Stack Overflow").


5

So long as your user ID is on the end of the shortened URL and at least 5 people that visit from website B did not also visit from website A, yes you should. The publicity badges track unique IP addresses that visit the question from one of your referral URLs. All the shortened URLs from the question and any of its answers will all count towards the same ...


4

My main reason for using a personalized link is getting a quick reference to a specific post. To still hint the target of the link, I usually follow these steps: Get a "personalized link", as a quick reference to the specific post within a Q&A. Suffix the link with ?url-of-question Enclose it within a descriptive link: [descriptive link name](link) ...


4

Its been mentioned on both the SE blog and postcasts that the view counter on SE is conservative. So its likely your real view count is between 24 and 36 (before the meta post) From The Trouble With Popularity The cartoon question alone had over a million views by our extremely strict view counter — which easily translates to at least two million ...


4

You have also the possibility to share on Twitter. I have only shared questions there, because my Facebook contacts are not interested in StackOverflow. Most of my Twitter followers probably aren't, either, but at least that makes the link potentially visible to the whole universe, and retweets could increase the number of hits. If you are not an active ...


4

But is this only when I share a link to this quesiton in one of my answer or can I also share the link (with my user id somewhere to count the accesses) somewhere else, maybe facebook? In order to gain the Announcer badge you must share a link outside the SE network. Sharing a link in one of your answer won't work. Also, rules for the ...


4

With the changes to the publicity badges these are now supported (confirmation from balpha). This question is now resolved; I was just retroactively granted a Publicist badge for sharing the link.   Quoting Rebecca Chernoff♦'s answer to a new question: No. These badges are specifically for linking to questions like the description says. So there was ...


4

What you propose is how I feel the functionality should behave, but the scheduled task that awards badges currently isn't flexible enough to swap a user's existing badge for another one - it just likes to award. We don't have time right now to work on this, but when we introduce more tiered badges, we will definitely do some refactoring.


3

They've obviously changed this recently because yesterday I gained the Publicist (gold) badge, and I login today to discover I was awarded the Booster(silver) badge, all on the same question! http://android.stackexchange.com/users/3868/dunhamzzz?tab=badges&sort=class


3

According to this: Sequence behind awarding link badges (Announcer, Booster, Publicist) You get the badges in order first: announcer, booster, then publicist. Looks like you got booster for this question because you already had announcer. (Even though you might have enough views for publicist.)


3

No publicity badges where awarded for the question, probably who ever shared it used the canonical url and not the promotional url that includes their user id. That said, your question appeared in the jQuery forums (see last comment), so you probably got a few views from there...


2

The idea behind the Announcer, Booster, and Publicist badges is to promote the site to people who don't use Stack Exchange. People on Stack Exchange are already here, and they already see the sites listed in the footer, global inbox, and ads in the sidebar. The badges are awarded for helping to build the network, and if you're just sharing links within the ...


2

I don't think so. From the badges page: Gold Badges are rare. You’ll have to actively work toward these. They’re something of an accomplishment! On the other end: Bronze badges are awarded for basic use of Meta Stack Overflow. They are easy to earn. The current ratios are consistent with these descriptions.


1

I guess, if we introduced voting on linked questions (eg. I agree this question should be linked) then I guess we could introduce a badge for proposing lots of good links. The problem is that having yet another area for meta voting could introduce unnecessary noise and complexity. The Booster et. el. badges are not intended for internal "dupe hunting" ...


1

You already get badge and reputation for referring people to commit for a website on Area51. Why would we need other badge for nearly the same exact thing ? The reputation you get on Area51 Referred user with a confirmed email address commits to the proposal +5 Referred user participates in the beta +25 The badge you get on Area51 (Silver Badge) ...



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