You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Announcing StemQ - A new STEM Q&A application for Steem!

in #stemq6 years ago

One of the answers appeared in my feed, and I upvoted it.

I came to think that if it's supposed to mimic the success of stackexchange and assume the most heavily upvoted answers are the best answers, it may fail as currently on Steem it's typically the more popular authors rather than the more popular posts that gets the upvotes. I felt morally compelled to investigate the alternative answers to see if any of those were better, and eventually give an upvote to an alternative answer as well.

Just my 2 cents. :-)

Sort:  

Hi @tobixen,

Yes, it's a valid point and we are all aware of the shortcomings of the voting system.
Currently StemQ will display answers by decreasing amount of netvotes which has clearly some drawbacks.

The only improvement that I can think of here is to back the project by a strong, well respected, curation team.

StemQ doesn't have that as of yet and so we are currently relying on other guilds, such as @steemstem and @curie, to help us upvoting quality content and in doing so raise the visibility of these contributions.

Building a strong community is currently the priority of the project and I believe that interesting developments will follow.

Thank you for checkout out for alternative answers. I hope others follow suit.

Thank you for your feedback.

@irelandscape

I think filters might work. I'm. Not tech savvy, but if there is a way to allow for just votes that were done through the website to be displayed on the site (thus, reducing hiding the bulk of auto upvotes people get from readers who aren't interested in science), it might go a long way to help.

That way, only votes from people who are interested in the post counts..

It's really dicey though, because if I were a casual reader and i found something I'm interested in, I probably could just vote because I found it meaningful anyways, I don't have to use StemQ... But then again, without something like this in place, it would always seem like the more popular people are better at science than others (as will be reflected on the votes they accumulate).

Me, as an old-school conservative guy, I'm always for a nice, manual censorship :D

The filter is a simple and elegant solution

You see...

Posts that are out of scope can be flagged by an administrator.
That will cause the post to disappear from StemQ.
Of course, that's a measure of last resorts...

It was a joke >D