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by drasticmeasures
2880 days ago
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Decentralized Reddit sounds neat. But! I just upvoted myself to 200 points (making it the top post of all time on notabug), then saw someone else downvote me to -100 points (in 5 minutes), effectively censoring me. While this was just me with one computer, how will you stop bad actors (specially state actors, corporate actors or other political actors) with immense technological resources from gaming the voting system to silence people? It's a flaw inherent to democratic Internet voting-based comment filtering, no? |
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Reddit (tries to) weigh the votes of bots, sockpuppets, and other no-do-gooders to 0, and the rest of us to 1.
Similarly, perhaps you weigh the votes of your friends to 1, your friend's friends to max(1,their_friends/10), and your friend's friends friend's to max(0.1,their_friends/100). Except for bob, who's votes you weigh at 0, because he's always getting his account hacked or suckered into yet another bitcoin ponzi scheme.
There won't be any single point of truth as to the "real" points of a post in this kind of model, but that's probably OK. Actually, there already wasn't: The same link in two different subreddits might gain wildly different amounts of points, with the subreddit adding as a proxy for a group of people who's votes you've decided to weight at 1.
Tech aside, decentralization just puts the onus for more finely deciding the weights of people's votes on the end users instead of on admins. With the right tools you can manage and limit abuse.
A flaw inherent in this model is doing admin stuff is probably more work than the average user wants to do, so such a model will probably never take off.