Timeline for Discussions update: Expansion to all tags
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
10 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Jan 30 at 13:30 | comment | added | Zoe - Save the data dump Mod | @Sayse That's because that's exactly what it is. They're grasping at whatever straws they can find, and a tiny increase in retention in a tiny userpool looks great to present without details to the public and the shareholders. They're also not going to release the numbers - they never do. That would undermine their dubious claims | |
Jan 27 at 17:32 | comment | added | Sayse | @Berthold - It would be good to see the actual numbers/counts still, the whole metric still just seems to be sugar coating to fulfil a tenuous reason to push this discussion narrative. | |
Jan 26 at 16:54 | comment | added | Berthold StaffMod | I updated the post to note that this is measuring weekly retention (i.e. week 2 retention, whether the user who posts or replies comes back within the next 7 days to do another post or reply) | |
Jan 25 at 18:59 | comment | added | Sayse | @Zoeisonstrike that’s kind of the data I was hoping to get back, it’s all well and good saying a fairly decent percentage but when that translates into 3 users vs an expected 2 that qa would retain for the same 64 then it’s a bit of a weak platform to carry on pushing discussions with | |
Jan 25 at 16:37 | comment | added | Zoe - Save the data dump Mod | strongly doubt their numbers and methods would get a pass from someone independent of the company with a background in statistics. This isn't the first time they've made questionable decisions based on numbers sourced with questionable or outright bad methodology | |
Jan 25 at 16:36 | comment | added | Zoe - Save the data dump Mod | "how does this translate to 35%?" - the post said 35% higher than public Q&A's retention rate, not a 35% retention rate. It implies the retention rate for public Q&A is ~3.41% (because 3.41% * 1.35 = 4.6%), though this assumes a constant 4.6% across the board for the sake of argument. The math is probably correct, but the analysis here is incredibly thin. As you and many others have noted, discussions has very few users, and it's unlikely that the users are representative of the overall user group. I'm not a statistics expert by any stretch of the imagination, but I | |
Jan 25 at 12:37 | comment | added | VLAZ | While one user creating more than one discussion is one form of retention, a user creating a discussion then posting a question or answer should also be valid. But it's still not clear how this was measured. It's also not clear if the opposite is also counted - a user posting a question and then a discussion. If so Users are posting links to questions they want answered in Collective discussions is relevant. Also People blocked from asking questions should be blocked from posting discussions | |
Jan 25 at 11:03 | comment | added | Sayse | @starball - They must have done, but even if they didn't of those 69, 43 were downvoted, 15 0 votes, 11 upvoted (with only one of the retained users making an upvoted post)... so what good is a higher retention if they're creating posts that aren't even appreciated by those that do take part in discussions | |
Jan 25 at 10:58 | comment | added | starball | note that there were/are other collectives with discussions on. but I'm wondering if they counted the spammers, and wish I could do the data analysis more easily myself. | |
Jan 25 at 10:57 | history | answered | Sayse | CC BY-SA 4.0 |