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RE: Vote Buying: an animation

in #life7 years ago

Ya this is the worst part! Many people are simply looking for the easiest path to money. No exceptions, no logic. If you tell them that they can earn 10 cents per day to click a button on a blank page, they will do it.

There is some perspective to be had here - for some people, they may be living in very economically depressed countries. If the average living wage in your town in $2, then earning $0.50 from an upvote bot scheme might actually be a great use of your time.

From a first-world perspective, it seems like insanity. But I try to stay open-minded. The best we can do is to help people see the bigger opportunities - if they realize that $10/day from a good steemit blog is completely possible, they may be open to trying different/better tactics.

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@heymattsokol, I try to stay open-minded, as well.

Experience tells me some of it may be cultural, as well. How come people in the Nigerian community seem able to figure out that good content will eventually earn good returns, while users in certain parts of SE Asia "default" to spamming, plagiarism and gaming the system?

Maybe it's in the approach... do you see Steemit as an "opportunity" (i.e. a windfall you would not otherwise have had) or as a "job" (setting up the dynamic that you are entitled/obligated to "get" something)?

How do we counter this in such a way that quality is rewarded? You and I both belong to an initiative that upvotes, BUT our memberships are "by invitation" and heavily vetted and very selective, on top of that-- merit based.

I'm not sure if there is a "big-picture" solution - there probably isn't some change to steem's rules or code that will fix it. For me it seems more like a problem to address one step at a time, from the ground up, with grassroots initiatives.

Depends on our status here too. For me - I have a lot of respect here, as my rep of 67 / 1,400+ followers indicates. But I don't have much money - I'm very poor, with only 2,500 of SP to vote with. So for me, I've focused on the community side - and as a result, now I'm able to use other user's money (via OCD and Curie) to support great posts.

For you it could be different. I think we each need to find our own best contribution. For example Ned shouldn't be spending his time curating posts - he has bigger fish to fry. And a new new user, reputation 25, shouldn't do much of that either. They should focus on content creation and meeting people.

It's all relative and there are no perfect answers, lol

edit: Also - there have been a lot of good conversations about this lately. I might make a "MEGATHREAD" soon where we can talk about it as a group... will invite you if that happens. :-)

Yup, perfect answers are in short supply, for sure. I keep hoping that the "communities" feature-- whenever they finally get it released-- will help filter some of all this.

And yes, everyone has their own gig... I'm trying to build this account "organically" as a venture to support art and artists and it is slow going, but I am patient... again, building a community, but keeping it somewhat "niche" specific to art and artists.

I'd appreciate a heads-up if you do create a discussion about all of this!