|
|
|
|
|
by mantrax3
4462 days ago
|
|
> "But in our universe, people saw the algorithm as hackneyed, particularly when Justin Bieber had a higher Klout score than the US president." Maybe Klout was wrong with this particular arrangement, or maybe your assumptions about who has more influence are wrong. Ever thought about that? After all, "entertainment clout" can be very quickly capitalized as "political clout", as Mr. Terminator has demonstrated. When it comes to selling products, whose endorsement will sell more products: Justin Bieber or the US President? Remember Klout's score is used to give "perks" to influencers, the purpose of which is that they show those perks to their fans, therefore influencing them. While I don't care about Klout at all, I have to say I'd rather bet on Justin Bieber than the US President for that specific purpose. |
|
I think the general consensus from Klout detractors is that a single "score" cannot encompass someone's influence. Some people are more influential in certain circles than others.
Of course, there is a broad-based influence score you can apply to people, in the same manner that Super Bowl ads are expensive because they reach a broad-based group of US TV viewers. If Justin Bieber reaches that group better than President Obama, than his higher Klout score is accurate.
But under that assumption, his Klout score (and many other Klout scores) are meaningless because we don't think of ourselves in that context. This is why, for example, HackerNews karma points are not fungible to Reddit's /r/AdviceAnimals karma points.