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Timeline for Staging Ground Reviewer Motivation

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

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Sep 9 at 19:29 comment added ColleenV @KevinB There will be no Google search traffic once the AI they are using your content to train is adopted widely enough. If they don't convince people to curate, the data doesn't have much value. SO doesn't make money from the number of contributions. It makes money from the ability to separate quality content in context from chaff now.
Sep 9 at 19:25 comment added ColleenV @CodyGray Who benefits was a lot more clearcut when there was unfettered access to the data dumps. Curation is critically important when you are selling the content to train commercial AIs. The most engaged, effective curators don't do it for rep or another badge. It's for something bigger. SO's interests are no longer aligned with its purported purpose of knowledge for the public good. No non-paid AI is going to be allowed to summarize this donated content or translate it. It's fine if you still believe the company isn't so greedy they'll kill the goose; some of us aren't so sure.
Sep 4 at 20:21 comment added Kevin B i would argue curation work in general has been pretty negative to the number of user contributions over time, and that the pearls would receive the same traffic from google regardless of whether or not we had shoveled away the sand. The value of curation is in keeping experts interested enough to continue providing expert answers.
Sep 4 at 20:15 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution @CodyGray "there's no real advantage to having Staging Ground reviewers [for the company]" I'd say there is. From a bit afar SG is just curation work. Curation work increases the quality and value of the site and the company directly profits from that by a higher quality of the dataset, by more visitors and more ad impressions. Also the report is here that numbers of SG reviewers is not growing (maybe even falling). ColleenV gives one possible explanation, other answers give others. Maybe people are simply not that helpful anymore, would be still another one.
Sep 3 at 23:45 comment added Cody Gray Mod But is this work really for "the company's benefit"? It seems like it's more for the benefit of the user who asked the question and also the larger community who uses this Q&A site and therefore seeks to keep it reasonably free of low-quality content. If one just looks at the company's benefit, there's no real advantage to having Staging Ground reviewers—or even an advantage to having a Staging Ground at all, is there?
Sep 3 at 20:24 history answered ColleenV CC BY-SA 4.0