Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by jiggy2011 4728 days ago
Humans are more likely to care about reputation than bot herders who can trivially flood the market with programs which will work 24 hours a day. As soon as you allow bots, it becomes 99% bots very quickly.

You would also get people doing some work themselves to build reputation up and then swapping in a bot.

It would be quite interesting to build a dedicated market for bots. Just let people upload scripts with a documented input/output format and then pay the developer a royalty each time it is run.

1 comments

From Amazon's perspective it doesn't matter if the user is a bot or a user. An user can also work themselves to build reputation up and then start doing low-quality work to increase pay. If you can't create a market for humans, you can't create a market for humans and bots.
The selling point of MT is that you can get human tasks done, if bots chase the humans out they loose that. It's similar to marketplaces like etsy in that regard.
Who are "they"? Amazon shouldn't care if the turks are humans or bots, they'll make the same dollar in any case. The people who create tasks for turks shouldn't care either: they just want stuff done.

The point of MT is that it's a market for jobs that cannot be easily automated. If someone can automate the task then so be it, it doesn't matter.

The point of MT is not a market place for "tasks that can only be done by humans", it's a market place for "tasks that can't be automated easily, therefore everyone and everything should have an opportunity to complete the task by any means what-so-ever. if you can only complete tasks on drugs then so be it. if you can only complete tasks by writing a bot so be it.". The seller just wants task to be completed cheaply.

The advantage of listing a job on MT vs finding a program to run is that you know it is at least reviewed by a human being who cares somewhat about their reputation within the system.

Once that guarantee goes away you affect the value of all transactions within the market. What is commonly known as a "Lemon market effect".