Timeline for Incentivizing people to avoid gamesmanship?
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
8 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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May 22, 2016 at 20:50 | comment | added | Fattie | @EngineerDollery - you are insane. Heh! | |
May 22, 2016 at 20:45 | comment | added | Software Engineer | @JoeBlow -- you are insane. 1) Almost every person on the face of the planet engineers the society around them. We start the second we exhale our first breath and we stop only when we exhale our last. 2) There is nothing about the Kardashians that defines this era as historic in any way. 3) There is nothing wrong with gamification -- it serves many purposes. Personally, I'm a contractor, and I have been for thirty-five years, I can now use SO to show off some of my work and my rep has been helpful -- if I spent more time here, it would be more helpful (and if we got rid of homework). | |
May 21, 2016 at 22:09 | comment | added | Fattie | only governments can do social engineering - coz only they have fiat currency | |
May 21, 2016 at 21:56 | comment | added | Paul Uszak | @JoeBlow As for social engineering, I think that you'll find that it's not only possible, but done all the time. Consider that western governments have taught you that terrorism is the greatest threat in the world even though hardly anyone gets killed. In the UK cars are evil and the bicycle must be promoted above all else and that these days the interests of the child outweigh the interests of the family. Any of these sound familiar? Try watching some Adam Curtis documentaries to see how deep the rabbit hole goes. | |
May 21, 2016 at 21:40 | comment | added | Paul Uszak | @JoeBlow I think that Google would only buy SO to shut it down, which I guess would be a good windfall for the SO shareholders. Only the programming forum has any net presence worth consideration, and that would just conflict with Google Groups. There's probably no revenue stream worth mentioning so it's unlikely to be an attractive investment. SO primarily seems to be a massively multi player on line brinkmanship game. | |
May 21, 2016 at 14:32 | comment | added | Fattie | ie, the question at hand would be like asking "I observe we live in a historical period where 'The Kardashians' are a thing - no, really - what can I do about that? How can I stop people watching?" The answer is there's no way to do so. Just ignore it. Try to teach your children that it's an unbelievably lame look to get in to 'The Kardashians' or 'gamification on a startup web site'. Social engineering is impossible. | |
May 21, 2016 at 14:29 | comment | added | Fattie | IMO this is the correct answer. SO is a 'consumer-production' startup waiting to be bought by google which is based on the risible "gamification" idea. Incredibly, a percentage of folks have so little "life" that they get in to this. But then, we live in a historical era where 'The Kardashians' are a thing. So there's no surprise. The magical upside of this is the astounding advances in engineering possible due to the crowd-cloud QA concept. You just have to ignore the sewer of the "gamification" aspect. In answer to the OP's question, it's absolutely impossible to change behavior. | |
May 20, 2016 at 16:54 | history | answered | Software Engineer | CC BY-SA 3.0 |