Thinking Like a Whale

in #steemit6 years ago (edited)

ABANDON SHIP! (OR DON'T)

Changes are coming to Steemit. It’s inevitable. Who knows if they’ll impact the platform negatively or positively. They’re coming in the form of mass exodus by the disenfranchised, future hardforks, changes in UI. They’re coming whether we want them to or not. Some of the changes are impossible to influence. Others, we have a duty to influence. The most pressing matter at hand is discovering the most effective way we can do so.

As an individual, I don’t know where I stand with @transisto after the whole flagging debacle with Michele Gent. It matters in a way, but I don’t need to know the answer. I’m not after his approval or attention, but I do value the insight he gave. He was willing to speak about this issue when most other whales don’t seem to be. I’ve been one of the most vocal Steemit users about the fact that I think capricious flags are damaging to the platform. However, they certainly opened a dialogue about issues with the infrastructure, and it’s a dialogue I’m more than willing to have. I certainly don’t claim any expertise here. But I’m trying to learn, and hope I can use my skills as a writer to help others learn with me.

BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN PERCEPTIONS AND REALITY

The subheader of this section is taken from the title of a post by @lukestokes. I think it sums up the biggest need of the platform right now, at least as far as the user side. It is very important for people to understand that Steemit is still in beta. Equally important is the fact that—like it or not—investors have different goals and priorities than content creators, and unless that detail registers, many users will continually be frustrated by their experience here.

This leaves us with two user types in the Steemit community. Having them co-exist side by side is like locking cats and dogs together in the same room. There will be skirmishes. There will also be also be a communication gap. Dogs and cats don’t speak the same language. The same is apparently true for investors and creators of Steemit content. Let me try to illustrate this, although be warned that my example is extremely oversimplified.

Pretend that a post earns $300 during its first twenty-four hours. But the post has ten views. Content creators are going to look at this and see success. The author is earning, the post is trending, the piece is well written and relevant, and everyone is motivated to write more and engage more. Great situation, right?

An investor is going to look at these same facts and see a train wreck. $300 is gone from the reward pool, allocated to one user who did not generate adequate view activity or influx of new money into the platform to justify this earning. In their opinion, this post has not earned its keep, like a horse that eats a barn full of hay but never has to pull the plow.

Content creators will scream bloody murder about this line of reasoning. The post is well-written! The author has many fans! Steemit is a social media platform and its value is in the blog! The author has worked their ass off to provide quality content! How dare someone who doesn’t even like to read judge this piece of writing to have no value!?

Investors will say they have no opinion about the quality because they never read the post. They looked at the reward versus view ratio and obtained all the information they needed. Content creators respond with outrage, citing hypocrisy for passing judgment on a post that wasn’t even read. The investor flags the post to return some of the payout to the community reward pool, which they know will increase payout for all users in direct ratio with the value returned. Content creators see the flag as an insult and a condemnation of the author’s hard work. Pretty soon everybody is yelling and nobody is hearing what anyone else is saying, because both sides of the issue are shouting in a completely different language.

Cats and dogs. And that room they share? Now it’s a war zone. Fur goes flying, and blood starts dripping down the walls.

SHORTSIGHTED

For me, neither position depicted here would benefit the platform over the long term. They are both extremes and therefore extremely limiting. If Steemit were simply a crypto hub, then nobody should ever have had the bright idea to attach a blog to the platform and invite the public. If Steemit were simply a publishing tool, why is it connected to a form of currency? There simply has to be a sweet spot somewhere in the middle where both types of user can find value in good content.

I can appreciate that Steemit is in beta. This being the case, perceived lack of interest by the developers in marketing to a mainstream public makes a twisted kind of sense. They know the platform isn’t ready for the big time just yet, so they compartmentalize and focus on building the foundation. Unfortunately, while their heads are buried in code, some of the little fires burning on Steemit are destroying thousands of prime social media acres. Those of us out here walking across the hot coals see the potential for a long-term setback because of this. We’re watching as Steemit’s public-facing persona takes quite a hit.

Outside of its tie-in with crypto, Steemit offers the mainstream very little in its current incarnation. It is only attracting people who already have a stake in Bitcoin or some other form of digital currency. Yet apparently the goal of investors is to draw new money to the blockchain and strengthen the value of their investment. Well…how ya gonna do that if you alienate the very people whose money you’d like to see flowing in?

@beanz recently made an interesting post about the ways curation impacts the community. She points out what should obvious: our content creators would make excellent curators, thereby increasing their value to the investing pool. She cites delegation as an option to give content creators a stronger voice. One commenter called it a “force multiplier.” I’m interested to follow the arguments for and against this idea.

POLICING BY DOWNVOTES

Several influential users on Steemit use the downvote option quite liberally. It’s their attempt to control the market. I am not anti-flag. You’ll never hear me argue that this feature should be eliminated from the Steemit toolkit. But seeing the downvote as a weapon available to exert personal agenda is not thinking like a whale. It’s thinking like a terrorist.

If Steemit guerillas need one surefire way to make sure the platform never succeeds as a social media site and remains a small, private community of circle-jerking, these flag patrols are the number one way to accomplish that. Whether or not I understand the “this is business, not personal” explanations for that flag, I also understand that a great number of professionals were watching when it happened, and there isn’t a chance in hell they will bring any of their money, audience, or creative input to this platform ever again. We’ve forever lost several authors, publishers, and photographers because of that incident.

Perhaps developers are counting on the influence of trend to negate these losses once they market Steemit in the mainstream. And to an extent, the numbers will bear them out. However, treating your current batch of content creators as disposable is not the best business strategy. Capricious flag attacks on the user base equate to bombs on civilian communities. There is way too much collateral damage for the world to ignore.

Top tier users adopt a somewhat indifferent attitude toward flagging. I’ve read comments by several whales and developers that are perhaps meant to be reassuring, but come across as dismissive toward community concerns. Let me see if I can couch this in terms of analogy. I think I have a really good one.

To me, a flag smack for nebulous reasons is a lot like alpha rolling a dog. If a dog is attacking me, I will do anything to stop that behavior, including put a dog on its back or its head or in the ground with several feet of dirt on top of it. If I am at immediate risk of being damaged, I will defend myself vigorously. But if I grab a dog who is not attacking me and flip that dog over onto its back just so I can prove my dominance, I have just proven to that dog that I’m an unstable leader who cannot be trusted, with unpredictable behavior and potential to cause real harm. One of two things is going to happen in the mind of that dog. It is either going to become reciprocally aggressive, or something is going to break in its psyche. Is that really what we want to do to our dogs? Is flagging our best content creators really something we want to do to our users?

The video below shows what it looks like when performed by a “professional,” dog trainer employed by the U.S. government.

A humorous but completely accurate depiction of how it seems from a dog’s perspective:

For more information about alpha rolling, read a fantastic article HERE.


Many may scoff and say flagging is nothing at all like alpha rolling. I disagree. I think both employ the same unpredictable strong-arm techniques to assert dominance. The end result is certainly the same. The person who got rolled is going to become uncharacteristically aggressive, or they are going to shut down, tune out, pack their heart in a box and either leave or become useless on the platform. None of this is what we need. Instead, let’s find a better system, manage user expectations, and reserve flags for the most egregious offenses a user can commit.

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This recent flagging activity has certainly opened my eyes as a content creator, focused solely on writing and sharing my thoughts. For Steemit to grow new money does indeed need to come in, so I see arguments made by investors and understand them more clearly, although I don't fully agree with them as a content creator.

Never forget that content creation is the source of Steem value in the first place, too. The blog aspect is what gives it value, and good blog content is essential to long-term success.

Content creation in steemit is somewhat analogous to mining in bitcoin. It is the means by which the new steem/bitcoin come in to existence.

Early on in steemit (for the first weeks or month) almost any post could earn you a large reward. Early on in bitcoin almost any little laptop doing the mining could earn you a reward in bitcoin.

That soon changed. It now takes a huge investment in equipment to earn any bitcoin at all. And it takes a lot of effort, strategizing, netorking, and, yes, luck, to earn significant steem.

This platform is an experimental hybrid of cryptocurrency and social media. No one knows how it will turn out.

Will the value of comments always be small? Maybe in the future you can make significant steem by piggybacking off popular posts with good comments.

And without quality content to interact with, it would be very difficult to persuade the next content creator from elsewhere to sign up and become part of the community.

I used to do mining for crypto currencies. And I do post and curate on steemit. It may be true that some types of content creators will leave, just as some miners (me for example) left crypto mining. But others with different skills/motivations will replace them.

Peoples' agttention can be attracted by other things than content creation to interact with. I hope that doesn't happen, but it is surely possible.

It depends how you define value.

What makes Steem different from the thousands of other altcoins on the market? What new utility does it bring that makes it useful in a unique way? That is what average people need to find valuable in a coin. For Steem, it is a blog where the coin can add weight to your vote. That is what keeps it from being just another forgotten coin worth a couple Satoshi. And it is the creators of content who support that.

The content attracts readers and more content creators, but unless they invest in Steem financially, they don't add to the reward pool, as far as I understand it.

The financial investors are symbiotically connected to the content creators who invest time and effort into creating the ecosystem that drives the market value. Without content and community, your investment falls to zero. We drive the demand that creates a price. If you cannot see this, you are blind. But don't worry. I can sell you an authentic Steem Pope indulgence for a mere 100 SBD to absolve your sins against Blog. :D

I see that, but I also see that, as @rhondak pointed out, both creators and investors are needed. One without the other adds little value.

Thus the word "symbiotic."

I think this might not actually be true, and we can prove it by looking around.

We know that social networks work. They function. Social media is one of the big killer apps of the decade and possibly longer. All of those social media operations have existed without some sort of blockchain-supported currency and done extremely well. There's a reason that everyone will compare your social media platform to Twitter, Facebook, and even smaller operations like Gab and Medium.

All of those were established well before forms of creator compensation were considered useful to add to extant social media platforms, and flourished.

Investors in STEEM? Without the backing of creators who are actually engaging in making content which will draw people to the platform in order to engage?

They are just people who have thrown money at their screen and look disgruntled when it doesn't magically reproduce.

Investors really aren't needed. Even if STEEM had no backing or connection to fiat currencies, it would still be a mechanism (albeit a deeply flawed and problematic one) for helping rank and sort content being created for potential quality.

Creators literally are the value of STEEM. And in the context of Steemit as a platform, they are the only revenue generators for STEEM. The rest is just bots talking to each other, passing around tokens that don't really mean anything and have no context.

Frankly, I consider that a problem. Other people, clearly, feel differently.

You realize this sort of comment, along with your other one, is likely to earn you a flag? Comment in a fashion that interacts intelligently with either the original poster or the person whose comment you reply to. Otherwise you are comment spamming and people will flag you.

wow! well explained...i changing my focus right away.
thanks for this dear

I have always thought that flags in an effort to "balance the reward pool" were as destructive to good curation as votebots indiscriminately supporting content. It is a bit annoying to see a few users consistently getting big payouts, but it's also painful to see a post FINALLY get recognition only to have some self-righteous whale decide it's gained "too much." Meanwhile, spam and plagiarism erodes the reward pool far more destructively for the ecosystem and community.

"...spam and plagiarism erodes the reward pool far more destructively for the ecosystem and community."

In fact, financial manipulation and political machination are at least equally degrading, and IMHO, far more deeply impact the platform, and community.

The middle ground advocated by @rhondak is perhaps attainable, but practically impossible to conceive, much less to derive from extant conditions. I'm gonna hang in there for now, but I reckon holding my breath while my betters tilt at windmills is an irrational approach to Steemit.

The confluences of money, manufactured opinion, and power politics are complex, and the tools available to us to negotiate such rapids are in few hands today. I reckon luck will be as important to Steemit's survival and future as good intentions, understanding, and solid code.

Upvoted and Followed!

I'm still pretty new around here but I must say that I loved this article.

I'm really still just trying to figure so many things out here at Steemit so I can't make any educated comments about all this but I certainly can say that what you have written here makes perfectly good sense to me.

Yes I read the whole thing! :-)

Thank you for your very talented article. I will be looking forward to more. :-)

We need a trickle up approach to the golden rule.
It is sad, that can I get a flag for my opinion is close to being a tag.
Be interesting to see what steemit becomes once it is out of beta,and working right(?)
It is definitely a good social media experiment.
Namaste!

I (currently still a newbie) found this article to be the first time I've truly been able to understand what happened and why.
Thank you!
I don't claim to know much about how this system works as a whole, but it's clear there are still bugs to be worked out, and some 'happy middle ground' to be created.

Well-reasoned and more diplomatic than I would have been.

"If Steemit guerillas need one surefire way to make sure the platform never succeeds as a social media site and remains a small, private community of circle-jerking, these flag patrols are the number one way to accomplish that."

QFT.

I hope the analogy helps bridge the gap abit. Made sense to me, but I'm an animal person.

If the platform regulates itself, there should be nothing to fear. Content creators come and go, good times and bad times come and go, and I don't think this incident is the beginning of the apocalypse at all. Having greatly benefited from @curie upvotes in the past, I could never get angry (even if I would feel disappointed) if they were to flag me for excessive profit.

That said, I am worried about guerrilla tactics and terrorism on steemit through mass flagging and targeting specific creators repeatedly. It's a very real danger, as similar tactics are in the free market as a whole. I believe this is where witnesses along with user-associations (like @thewritersblock) have to come in and work towards finding solutions, systems to protect creators, etc.

As you have said, Steemit is in beta and as long as this is true, we'll see big changes in the metabolism of the site, it's etiquette, who gains more SBD, etc. Anyone who feels really interested on the platform should endeavor to make their voice heard and make it a better functioning place. That's how the environment regulates itself.

Steem on!

I appreciate your views and also want ithis should be stopped "mass flagging and targeting specific creators repeatedly"

The sole purpose to start Steemit to make a better Social media platform then FB, G+ etc.. (in case if you watched all promo videos of Steemit) but due to some loopholes or you can a some are taking undueadvantage of the system is not right.

One must do something, there should be more space for positivity and LOVE not hatred, jealously, and envy

Very well written and explained blog. I'm troubled by these issues and indeed they are disappointing. Good content creators are leaving or considering doing so. I'd leave the flagging for VERY SERIOUS OFFENSES, not as a bully tactic or power trip as many notice quite quickly coming into this platform.

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