Its all about the Benjamins -- Or is it?

in #voting8 years ago (edited)

This post started as a response to this comment by @timcliff.

There were sprawl issues, so i decided to make a whole new post. I intend to analyze a post, and see if voting really is all about the benjamins.

Im using this post by steem sports. You can take a look at the Steemdb report here

I selected steem sports because i suspect many people think it is a large beneficiary of bot voting (it is) and users looking for curation rewards (it isnt). Other popular posts i looked at had a similar distribution to SS. Ill do another one in the replies if people think its not representative.

On this post, there were 18 voters with 1 tera-rshares and above. All 18 got top 30 weights for curation rewards. In addition to these 18 voters, there were 12 additional voters who had less than 1 tera-rshare but also got in the top 30 cuation reward weights.

All told, these 30 voters were responsible for approximately 92% of the posts total $161.25 payout (taking steemsports upvote as a given). So good, bad or indifferent, if we want to know whether curation rewards are whats motivating these voters, we should take a look at how much they made.

CUration rewards are 25% of the posts rewards. They're assigned according to the SP of the voter, and how much SP votes before and after him. The chart below lists the top 30 voters, the rshares they gave to the post, and their curation reward weight and curation rewards on the post.

In total, this post earned $40.31 in curation rewards. Of that $40.31, $35.17 was forfieted in the reverse auction and went to the poster. Of the remaining $5.17, $.69 was lost due to rounding down rewards less than 2 cents.

Of the $4.48 actually distributed in curation rewards(2.7% of the posts value btw. This is low, but not crazy low. @furion 's last two posts had 6% and 7% respectively go to curators. The-alien's last post was 5.5%. @jrcornel 's 'i lost 60k' post was 6% to curators. @ats-david 's pga post was 6.25% to curators), @smooth, the post's largest individual supporter, earned 1.6 SP, worth approximately 25 cents at the time. berniesanders, the post's second largest supporter, earned 8.2SP, worth about $1.20. WItness.svk earned about 40SP, worth 60 cents.

Votercuration weightvote weight
smooth127.659 PV28.838 TRS
berniesanders652.678 PV22.925 TRS
xeldal106.549 PV8.753 TRS
complexring47.585 PV7.937 TRS
riverhead73.376 PV7.485 TRS
witness.svk316.896 PV5.972 TRS
enki81.234 PV5.301 TRS
datasecuritynode41.686 PV5.025 TRS
nextgencrypto54.825 PV4.399 TRS
silversteem34.909 PV3.439 TRS
thisvsthis51.594 PV1.760 TRS
james21214.541 PV1.486 TRS
silver25.050 PV1.474 TRS
cryptoctopus63.214 PV1.293 TRS
cyber10.649 PV1.154 TRS
steemrollin58.548 PV1.126 TRS
ihashfury7.164 PV1.093 TRS
tuck-fheman7.668 PV1.045 TRS
silver25.050 PV1.474 TRS
wang71.090 PVg92.163 GRS
svk20.502 PV202.593 GRS
joseph20.324 PV773.011 GRS
joele19.602 PV182.438 GRs
ioc19.491 PV599.755 GRS
goldmatters14.961 PV114.900 GRS
leesunmoo14.268 PV415.900 GRS
mata12.143 PV90.027 GRs
arama11.320 PV661.884 GRS
saramiller7.728 PV140.875 GRS
teamsteem34.736 PV314.771 GRs

Now, that doesn't seem like a great ROI, but 40 times a day, it might be an OK return. So maybe they really are in it for the money. Except. Nearly every single one of these voters could have earned more in curation rewards by simply picking a random post or comment that was more than 30 minutes old and had not been voted on, and upvoting it at full power (the possible exceptions [email protected], who did pretty good for curation based on stake, though i think it would have been close-ish and wang)

I don't mean their own comment, i mean just some random comment... Since it would be easy to find a comment or post without any votes and more than 30 minutes old, its accurate to say the individuals who determined 92% of this posts payout were sacrificing some curation rewards by voting on it. Potentially a lot. I think at the time both bernie sanders and smooth had upvotes worth in the 10-20 dollar range, which would mean a guaranteed payout of $2.5 - $5 for voting on an empty post (10-20X the return on the vote for smooth and 2x-4x for bernie).

Now, this is not always the case. There are high paying posts where curators do better than what i described here. However, if you look at the posts where curators do better, theyre generally the kind of posts that @timcliff and @snowflake seem to want (ie, not posts that are auto-upvoted because of bots. Ones where the first whale comes in hours after its posted). An example is @snowflakes own "guradians" post (part ii) (with over 18% of the reward going to curators, it was one of the highest 'top trending' posts I saw).

When a curator does do well on a high paying post, it is almost always the first whale in that does well. It becomes a worse and worse deal for subsequent whales after that (thats why berniesanders did so much better than smooth on the post above, despite giving up 66% to the reverse auction).

I am in 100% agreement with @timcliff and @snowflake that many (whales and non whales alike) are voting the way they do for the wrong reasons. However, those reasons are not curation rewards. They just aren't.

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It's funny that you brought this up because I just made a similar comment earlier to another user regarding a misconception about something I had mentioned on my post. It was a question of "piling on."

https://steemit.com/steemit/@mark-waser/fixing-curation-rewards-or-how-much-is-a-poor-person-worth#@ats-david/re-mark-waser-fixing-curation-rewards-or-how-much-is-a-poor-person-worth-20170216t175425171z

I agree that the reason isn't necessarily related to curation rewards. In fact, I have stated many times that whales actually earn a generally lower percentage on their curation returns than most active curators. Too many people look at the total SP distributed via curation rather than the percentage of their stake that is earned.

For example: When I spend more time curating, I can typically earn anywhere between 0.05% and 0.1% in SP returns on any given day. Most of the whales are earning closer to 0.01%.

Of course, there are some exceptions. If you look at val-b, for instance, over the past month, he is earning percentages between 0.04% and 0.07% regularly. And the actual SP amounts are fairly large (over 1,000 per day, many times), which is why making these accounts more active in guilds isn't necessarily the best idea. They crowd out all other curators and further increase the disparity of stake while also lessening the influence of smaller stakeholders.

https://steemdb.com/@val-b/curation

https://steemdb.com/@val-b/curation

Im not sure if its an arrangement or he just got lucky, but val-b does well on curation, at least partially, because when he and berniesanders vote for curie posts, he always gets to go first (and also seems to go before most of the SP weight of the whole trail)

But yeah i agree with the rest.

Edit to add -- he mentioned in another thread that all the curation rewards he earns that way go back to curie.

This was not by design and I am no longer supporting Curie. I believe there used to be a place for such a guild in the past but no longer see such a need given the impact they are currently having on rewards.

Can you explain that further? I'm no longer qualified for curie, so I'm not asking that question for myself but rather friends and family that I've been working on recruiting to the platform.

Based on my own experience, as well as the experiences of a rather large number of people I've had the privilege of getting to know over the past two and a half months, curie embodies the slogan "come for the rewards". Without this guild, most new users would be lucky if they broke fifty cents on any of their posts. And possibly more importantly, without this guild many of these same users would not have caught the attention of those with enough sp to impact their posts once they were no longer new.

The biggest problem I have with every argument I've seen concerning the guilds over the past couple of weeks, is that for the most part, the loudest of those who are adamantly opposed to the guilds happen to be among a very select few that have consistent support of certain whales, and therefore they appear to have no need of the guilds. Perhaps because they are friends with these whales, or because they were here at a time when many more whales were far more active on the platform and therefore it was much easier to attract attention, either way new people do not stand much of a chance of this happening for them.

The biggest problem I have with every argument I've seen concerning the guilds over the past couple of weeks, is that for the most part, the loudest of those who are adamantly opposed to the guilds happen to be among a very select few that have consistent support of certain whales, and therefore they appear to have no need of the guilds.

Ive been pretty loud about thinking the guilds are some bullshit and i don't have the consistent support of any whales.

nesting

I'm not attacking anyone, I'm just completely confused as to what it is the people arguing about the guilds are trying to achieve. What can be done that's better, how can it be done, and who is going to do it?

its hard to know exactly what voting would be like without the guilds, because they've been around, in one form or another, since jumpstreet.

My problem with the guilds is that their method of paying their curators works at cross purposes to their stated intention in two ways.

  1. By taking a considerable amount of money from the rewards pool for cookie cutter content thats posted as a pretext for whales to pay them for their curation, they make it so everyone gets fewer rewards, when their stated intent is to make everyone get more rewards.

  2. By posting low-quality cookie cutter content, then elevating it to the top of trending every single day to make their payroll, they showcase bad content, where they propose to improve the quality of content on steemit by showcasing good content.

True. And I know that you actually do have steemit and its users best interests in mind. But I still maintain that without the guilds there would be far fewer people getting recognition. Unless you can show me how I'm wrong about that. I talk to a lot of people, and well over ninety five percent of them rely on guilds for the financial aspect of this platform. Yes, there are many whose rewards are inconsistent, which sucks, but their rewards are still coming from the guilds, which means they would have none without them.

But this is the actual point that I'm making, or the question(s) that I'm asking: I'm not attacking anyone, I'm just completely confused as to what it is the people arguing about the guilds are trying to achieve. What can be done that's better, how can it be done, and who is going to do it?
I should probably just stick with this and not make any other statements because every time I comment people tend to respond to everything but. Though I'll probably just be ignored.
By the way, the only thing that these posts of the past several days seem to have accomplished are less overall activity from the guilds...and the result has been less people making money, or making less money at any rate.
Yay.

I guess you missed the blog posts and comments from those who haven't had "consistent support" from whales. Maybe they haven't received as much visibility because of that, but they do exist - you just have to find them.

Regardless - is it not possible to separate the arguments made from the people making them? Because I honestly don't see why someone's earnings matter if their arguments are sound and their data is correct. That would be a fallacious argument to make against their position.

I haven't missed them, in fact I vote for them. Probably fifty percent of the posts I vote on make under a dollar because they got overlooked. But the point I was making is that without groups such as curie the number of posts making under a dollar would be a hell of a lot closer to a hundred percent. Because who else is spending their time looking for new users and good material and making sure it gets rewarded? If they were to dismantle tomorrow, who is going to step up and do what they do? Oh and a hundred times better than they do it, which is what people seem to be asking.
I'm not attacking anyone, I'm just completely confused as to what it is the people arguing about the guilds are trying to achieve. What is the solution, what can be done that's better, how can it be done, and who is going to do it?

Recently I wrore a post comparing reward distribution on Steemit and on Golos(Steemit licence for ru zone, no guilds so far) I guess you might be interested to have a look
https://steemit.com/steemit/@svamiva/from-golos-with-love

Thank you :) But a really big difference, I think, is that golos is very new and therefore the whales are probably far more active on the platform. I think the only way to really compare the two, is to see how steemit operated in the beginning.
I truly hope that golos doesn't end up facing the same problems, and I'm glad that it's doing well in this department so far. Thank you for sharing that with me :)

Upvoted and resteemed for good discussion topic, and great data on the issue.

It is a really great point, and you are right that there are lots of other causes for misaligned voting.

I am curious though, if you look at the data objectively - is there a case for curation rewards causing some bad influence? If so, I would be curious to know what percentage of overall rewards it is influencing.

I am curious though, if you look at the data objectively - is there a case for curation rewards causing some bad influence?

Certainly. For one thing, many people don't understand the system. So they pile onto trending posts or autovote popular authors believing that they will earn curation rewards that way, when, in fact, it won't. Also, many would argue that wang/recursive's strategy is pretty good for maximizing rewards (beating everyone in and voting in the first 2 minutes and just taking the hit for the reverse auction) and i think that's negative at least to an extent. But i also think that part of things would be trivially easy to solve (just distribute reverse auction money to later voters).

But they also do some good. Because if you look at the people who are really after curation rewards (biophil and ats-david are examples) theyre actually finding and upvoting decent undiscovered content by overlooked authors. And yeah, theyre doing it for the money (i assume). But ive been a business person for most of my life. I can't hate that they are doing it for the money.

that is to say, the people who are really voting the way they do for curation rewards aren't the ones you think and theyre not voting for the posts you think they are.... the posts you think are the beneficiaries of curation reward driven voting offer some of the worst returns possible for that endeavor.

I can tell you definitively that my bot votes for steemsports, and I vote for them manually whenever I see them too, because steemsports is step 1 towards a full steem predictions market (I actually am not a big sports fan). My intent in voting for them is to give whatever little support I can to an innovative entrepreneurial platform, who I hope will raise demand for the steem cryptocurrency.

IMO, thats why most of its major and medium sized supporters vote for SS. Probably the minnows are in it for the free monies, but theyre not having a significant impact on payout anyway

I think you're right.

Given there are bots running around upvoting every post 1%, are there any posts that don't have upvotes at 30 minutes?

comments... that said, fyrst isnt doing bad on curation rewards for stake if you look at his numbers.

rEsteemed and UPvoted because I loved the name ; )
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just saw this article. great analysis! :)

I haven't kept up with the entire debate, but I really have no idea what "misaligned voting" could possibly be.

well just staying o the feed page or the new or hot or whatever trail there is and voting on payouts or people, rather than content, essentially gaming the system.

Easy solution would be, get rid of the Upvote button on the pages :D and leave it in where the post is at.

Sad part is that would only annoy some people and add in more bots :D since they won't have a problem upvoting wherever the button is, I'm arguing we need more readers because that is what the platform is for, creation and curating, now if people don't want to do it but want the rewards there is a misalignment.

I guess that many users are still voting for what they like and authors they support without paying much attention to the curation rewards.

Yes and there are many gaming the votes, the problem is the ones that do far outweigh in power the ones who support good content, so good content gets 300 votes and 200 views and a 5$ payout and some posts make 200 votes and 10 views with a 20-30 post payout. So how is that balanced and how is that curating content :D

This post has been ranked within the top 50 most undervalued posts in the second half of Feb 16. We estimate that this post is undervalued by $7.65 as compared to a scenario in which every voter had an equal say.

See the full rankings and details in The Daily Tribune: Feb 16 - Part II. You can also read about some of our methodology, data analysis and technical details in our initial post.

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