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Aug 11, 2014 at 16:55 comment added Ben Voigt The problem with tying votes to rep is that there are so many ways of gaining rep today, enough of which aren't related to voting as to create medium-rep users with no experience with the rationale for voting.
Aug 11, 2014 at 16:54 comment added Ben Voigt It also could be that they're just minimally active... but minimally active users aren't harming the site nearly as much as "roboreviewers" and mass votes rewarding bad edits, bad questions, and bad attitudes.
Aug 11, 2014 at 16:53 comment added Ben Voigt @l4mpi: Once again, this proposal is not aimed at fraudulent users; they're a happy casualty. It's aimed at users who use their newly obtained privilege excessively before they get any feedback on its use. I'd almost like to make it rate-limited until a certain number of votes have been cast. But I think elapsed time is good too -- even if they aren't using the privilege and getting a lot of feedback, they're showing that they aren't hasty with it either, which makes it a lot more likely that they've read some discussions among other users about votes cast and why.
Aug 11, 2014 at 14:47 comment added l4mpi @BenVoigt "you would have had fewer votes each day of the first week" - which is exactly what I'm complaining about. If anything, the amount of votes should be tied to rep (5 votes/day @ 25 rep, 15 @ 100 etc) and not to time spent on the site, because as I said, there's nothing stopping anybody from simply waiting a week (and as seen in OPs case, the puppeteers can be patient). You can of course make it extremely hard to upvote anything as a new user, but that makes it hard for all legitimate users as well. Doing that just to throw sticks in the way of a few fradulent users seems excessive.
Aug 11, 2014 at 14:18 comment added Ben Voigt @l4mpi: You earned privileges from receiving upvotes, not suggested edits. You reached 200 rep with only a single edit accepted, so you wouldn't have been affected by my proposal, save that when you first earned the right to vote, you would have had fewer votes each day of the first week. And before you joined, rep cap from edits was zero, and that didn't work badly either.
Aug 11, 2014 at 10:37 comment added l4mpi @gnat I can explain to myself why I'm against such a proposal: I can easily think of multiple ways in which this can be annoying to legitimate users of the site and limits legit use of SO (the same holds true for the linked proposal to limit/delay upvoting on associated accounts). Furthermore it doesn't stop anyone from sockpuppeting, it just adds a delay - of course that can act as a deterrent, but that it actually has an impact is an unproven assumption. And it doesn't even prove it's a significant problem at all, which I find highly unlikely.
Aug 11, 2014 at 9:37 comment added gnat @l4mpi well voting based on personal feelings is exactly my issue with "values guards", I for one try to abstain until I can explain to self why I am voting (and no, I like / dislike doesn't qualify). FWIW it was exactly the case with post referred in my first comment here, it proposed similar idea and my first instinct was to vote it down and I resisted it and took time to ponder possible benefits and drawbacks, and change opinion to opposite (though I am not yet fully sold on it, given that we have no stats to learn it better)
Aug 11, 2014 at 9:20 comment added l4mpi @gnat I vote down because I personally would be opposed to such a change, as I personally would have been extremely annoyed by it. Again, it's overkill to propose a radical change just to stop some sockpuppeteers who arguably don't even cause harm. A few users illegally gain a few hundred rep - nobody cares. Look at all the "legions of help vampires" who think SO is everybodys personal helpdesk and gain way more rep in ways that are completely legitimate according to our SE overlords. And you're right we're missing data and proof here; there's no data that proves it's a significant problem.
Aug 11, 2014 at 9:05 comment added gnat @l4mpi quoting your prior comment, "so what". Singled experience proves nothing, you would not have bothered is opposite to mine, I wouldn't mind having such a delay - neither mine nor your singled opinion proves anything. Funny how real concerns worth addressing are buried under instinctive voting, I can think of at least one, like one would rather learn about voting stats prior to proposing delay, like how many users vote their first day or week, but no one mentions that, people just vote down 'cause it's simply sounds like changing too much
Aug 11, 2014 at 8:56 comment added l4mpi @gnat If a one-week delay for voting would have been in effect when I joined the site, I would not have bothered to contribute or at least wouldn't have been as motivated. And we have "legions of regular help vampires" who are already far beyond the 10k or even 20k mark; and people with enough rep that they should know better who upvote them. Crippling every new user just to make it a bit harder for sockpuppeteers to illegally gain a bit of rep is thus simply overkil; especially considering it's probably uncommon. Something like making editing a 10-rep privilege would make more sense IMO.
Aug 11, 2014 at 8:33 comment added gnat @l4mpi "so what, they wait X days" -- with all due respect, this doesn't sound convincing in the light that Ben proposes a full week delay. For a "smart" user infrequently pumping up their rep such a delay would likely still be somewhat acceptable but think of legions of regular help vampires throttled like that
Aug 11, 2014 at 8:18 comment added l4mpi @gnat Here's an explanation: The proposal to lower the daily vote limit is useless, it causes minimal annoyance to a sockpuppeteer at best. Same holds for "you can't vote for X days" - so what, they wait X days. But this waiting period would be harmful to legitimate users who get annoyed that they can't upvote - I for one initially started participating on SO to be able to upvote great content (and soon after, to downvote all the crap). The only real deterrent to puppeteers would be increasing the rep for the upvote privileges, but that would again harm legit users.
Aug 10, 2014 at 20:42 comment added gnat hey! I just clicked vote split on your answer and... here they are, four votes down without even attempting to explain what could be wrong. That's how "values guards" operate, danger danger, values under attack, turn off your brain and vote it down, immediately. If you post something like this at MSE, it will likely get buried by about dozen downvotes in 1-2 hours. To give it a chance to survive, you'd need either a solid group of supporters or ability to write like Col Shrapnel
Aug 10, 2014 at 19:46 comment added gnat I see. But meta "values guards" will likely instinctively downvote this no matter how you present it. OTOH, if you ever dare to present this as a feature request or discussion, feel free to ping me, it will immediately get my upvote and as much bounties as I can to support
Aug 10, 2014 at 19:45 comment added Ben Voigt enough time in the community to either understand the principles and goals behind voting or learn how to vote appropriately by example. (In addition to the delaying effect on voting rings -- but I wrote this answer in context of a moderator's evaluation that no such funny business was occurring -- the proposal is intentionally to welcome the contributions of legitimate new users while giving them more time to learn about the culture before they start exercising privileges)
Aug 10, 2014 at 19:43 comment added Ben Voigt @gnat: I specifically avoided ideas about "don't allow edit suggestions on the day an account is created", because that would interfere with legit users who have been lurking, see something they know how to improve, and create an account to do so. At the same time, a longtime lurker is unlikely to suddenly discover a whole set of things to improve, and even if they do, limiting the rep reward is not actively interfering with that contribution. What it will interfere with is people who find the site for the first time and decide they want privileges as rapidly as possible, without spending
Aug 10, 2014 at 19:39 comment added gnat ohh week delay would be simply fantastic. But this idea has no chance to survive because it's oh so friggin' far against fundamental values of SO where everything is instantly granted. That's why I prefer to stick with less "meta-offensive" one day delay. It won't stop smart users, but as long as it slows down legions of banned help vampires, it would be good enough for me...
Aug 10, 2014 at 19:27 comment added Ben Voigt @gnat: Not enough. To quote Shog9: "person behind the bulk of them ... was suspended. He'd spent days setting all this up, and hours just executing the votes" Just not voting on the first day is no obstacle to such a person; just creating the accounts a day earlier during the planning is sufficient. On the other hand my suggestion of needing 3-4 days to gain the privilege, then another week to upvote the beneficiary account, is a lot more pain to abusers.
Aug 10, 2014 at 1:03 comment added gnat a simple idea has been proposed in this MSE answer: new user 'shouldn't be allowed to vote on the first day on the site even after earning 25 "rep" if that happens; maybe only on the second day on the site'
Aug 9, 2014 at 23:00 history answered Ben Voigt CC BY-SA 3.0