Recycling posts as you can see. https://hive.blog/@naza3783/replies there's a few warnings there. The user may be sympathetic but reposting old content while erasing the original posts to try and hide it is fraud.
You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
Yep, I have no issues with that - is there still a tool to see edits on posts?
Ecency has an edit history feature. Go to https://ecency.com/spanish/@naza3783/planta-de-lechosa-cargada its the three dots at the top of the post.
The user did this with many posts over July and August.
Hi Bernie,
LTNS
Are you telling me that all of the last seven posts are repeats of the same content? I wish I had a way of checking for those things. I have always checked text on google and images on tineye. Most of the people that I support are reblogged by others that I know to be honest.
Let me know
(and if you are not Bernie, sorry but you were flagging lockstep with him at one point. I have a good memory.)
I'm not Bernie. The posts are repeat of the old posts that were edited. It's been going on for some time apparently. Ecency search and features are pretty good for verifying posts. We need to get more community tools for this kind of thing up but it's a question of design and manpower.
You got me on @ecency at least. I had seen edit history on hiveblocks before but it is challenging to sift through them there. It would have been easier to find if the offending post had a $0.00 payout. Instead, every subsequent post was flagged.
What if she had seen the warning, translated it, and decided never to do that again?
Yes, Ecency has Edit History and you can add
?history
at the end of URL and you will get history of any comment and post right away.I agree. There are some very well done tutorials out there that never had the traffick in the first 7 days. It used to be you could be appreciated during the first 30 days. Back then, people were accused of "abusing the blockchain" if they voted on something on day 30. Blockchains cannot be abused they have their set limits and voting within those limits is by definition "not abuse." (I am not pro-shit-posting)
It's a question that requires modeling to answer in my opinion. We know the challenges and opportunities of the 7 day system but we don't know what would happen if we have a let's say 7 week system. I would guess it would be more of the same.