I always wondered if an algorithm could be implemented akin to the Page rank algorithm. A vote from someone counts more if the person votes seldom and it counts more if the person is upvoted frequently by people with high vote weight.
The assumption is that it is that we will capture the variable of “how well do they know lesswrong” by measuring how much they are upvoted. I think the most important part is that votes by people with high karma give more karma. The best kind of upvote is one by someone who is very very popular on lesswrong because they say lots of important stuff, but almost never thinks anything is worth upvoting.
Ah. If that’s the goal, I suggest increasing the impact of votes the more upvoted someone is, and increasing the upness of votes the more often she downvotes relative to upvoting. If I’m popular and upvote a whole lot of things, that seems like a possible reason to weight my downvotes more strongly. But If I’m popular and don’t vote for much of anything at all, it’s not as clear to me why that’s a reason to take my vote more seriously than if I were equally popular but participated in the voting system more. The latter just seems to discourage popular people from voting very much.
If we want to encourage our popular people to vote more, we should increase the power of their votes the more votes they make, rather than decreasing it.
I always wondered if an algorithm could be implemented akin to the Page rank algorithm. A vote from someone counts more if the person votes seldom and it counts more if the person is upvoted frequently by people with high vote weight.
Could you explain this bit? I’d expect someone who votes seldom to have lower quality votes, because ey’re likely to read less of LW.
The assumption is that it is that we will capture the variable of “how well do they know lesswrong” by measuring how much they are upvoted. I think the most important part is that votes by people with high karma give more karma. The best kind of upvote is one by someone who is very very popular on lesswrong because they say lots of important stuff, but almost never thinks anything is worth upvoting.
Ah. If that’s the goal, I suggest increasing the impact of votes the more upvoted someone is, and increasing the upness of votes the more often she downvotes relative to upvoting. If I’m popular and upvote a whole lot of things, that seems like a possible reason to weight my downvotes more strongly. But If I’m popular and don’t vote for much of anything at all, it’s not as clear to me why that’s a reason to take my vote more seriously than if I were equally popular but participated in the voting system more. The latter just seems to discourage popular people from voting very much.
If we want to encourage our popular people to vote more, we should increase the power of their votes the more votes they make, rather than decreasing it.