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RE: The social consensus layer: "proof of attention"

in #technology2 months ago

I totally agree. Proof-of-attention should be considered while deciding a post's worth. However, I have a few concerns regarding your idea...

1- Do you think readers would answer those questions? It's possible that people enthusiastically read an article, even engage but don't care to answer the questions.

2- What kind of questions there should be? Should be related to the content...

3- People can use AI for finding and answering questions and skip reading the post.

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I agree on all of your points. Personally, I'm much more of a lurker than a commenter, so questions in an article wouldn't do a great job at measuring my attention. The concept definitely needs to be improved & extended. Of course, there's a whole area of research into attention tracking, so I'm sure there are tons of possibilities for web site owners that I'm not even aware of. (things come to mind like page view times, mouse movements, click tracking, etc...)

As to the type of questions, the first thought is that they should be related to the content, but there are other possibilities. For example, there could be generic questions about finding related information elsewhere on the Internet or even in other Steem posts. i.e. "Find a Steem post that relates to this one and post a reply to describe some things that the two posts have in common". I thought of some others earlier, but now I'm drawing a blank.

You're also right that people would use AI to find the questions, and try to game the system. That's another reason why I thought of embedding the questions as images. It's not impossible to read text from images, but that would make it harder.