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by abathur 2545 days ago
It should, but if anyone knows who these kingmakers are, it's still probably just a matter of time before they accrue enough power for it to be worth someone's time to at least try to track them down and manipulate their decisions (bribe, blackmail, sponsor, send free trials, target with marketing/propaganda campaigns, etc.)
1 comments

Who says it even has the same kingmakers every day? Slashdot solved that part of metamoderation two decades ago.

A person might be an expert in cars but not horses. A car expert might be superseded . The seed data creators could be a fluid thing.

This is a technocracy. Noone wants this but Hacker News.
Let's say you have a subreddit like /r/cooking. You think exposing a control in the user agent (browser, app, ui) that let's you sort recipe results by lay democracy, professional chefs, or restaurant critics taste is a technocracy?

Are consumer reports and wirecutter less valuable than Walmarts best sellers? Is techmeme.com worse than Hackernews by virtue of being a small cabal of voters? Should I dismiss longform.org and aldaily as elitist because they aren't determining priority solely from the larger populations preferences. Is Facebooks news algorithm better because it uses my friends to suggest content?

Is it a technocracy that metacritic and rotten tomatoes show both user and critic score? I'm proposing an additional algorithm that compares critic score with user score to find like voters and extrapolate how a critic would score a movie they have never seen. I think that would be useful without diminishing the other true scores. I would find it useful to be able to choose my own set of favorite letterboxd or redef voters and see results it predicts they would recommend, despite them never having actually voted on a movie or article. Instead of seeding a movie recommendation algorithm with my thoughts, I could input others already well documented opinions to speed up the process.

This idea would work better if people voted without seeing each others votes until after they vote. It might be hard to extrapolate Roger Ebert's preferences if voters formed their opinions of movies based on his reviews. You'd end up with a false positive that mimics his past but poorly predicts his future.