Detailing components of communication

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Guaranteed Delivery vs Lossy

you cannot tell that you're being ignored, you can only guess. If one sort of message is dropped, a similar sort of message will also be dropped. Facebook's algorithm is now lossy.

Astroturfing isn't something we can create a technical solution for.

Ephemerality / indexed / unindexed

  • Anything which can't be searched or known about by a 3rd party is ephemeral. Ello was unsearchable, and with a private account it's unindexed by Google.
  • Ephemeral, indexed system would be 4chan. Continuously updated. Something Aweful counts as the same -- after 6 months, gets kicked to archive, so you can't read unless you'vepaid $10 for upgrade.
  • Ephemerality will only have probabilistic privacy benefits. In SnapChat, we figured out that if there is interesting content, it will be saved.
  • Ephemerality effects how people use something. Twitter, after a certain number of following, means you "cannot step in the same TweetStream twice".
  • Flickr is indexed by tags. YouTube indexes by tags, but not by the way something moves.
  • Unindexed - OTR, SnapChat. Gives a sense of closed community -- not visible to spiders nor to folk wandering around.

Sharing increases laziness

Different human semantics/connotation. ShoutOut vs thoughtfully inviting people.

Scope insensitivity

not realizing you're a part of the masses.

  • "47 other people have said somethign like this" on Amazon
  • "Factually false" or "agree/disagree" etc. Can agree but say it's overly adversarial.

Moderation

  • Top-down moderation doesn't scale, full stop
  • Bottom-up moderation might be having enough karma to just be able to edit posts. Stack overflow, for instance, because it's about being clear and useful, you might be moderated for language and syntax.
  • Moderation as a mechanism for curation. Of posts, of individuals.

Velocity

  • If content shows up too quickly, might bias towards fluffy nonthinking.

rapid inbound goes for system1 responses. off-the-cuff becaus ethere's too much going on

  • "You cannot comment unless you've actually read teh whole thing" -- can we do this technically? CSS fingerprinting on if people have actually opened the link. iFrame at bottom of next page that pings back, query the cookie from an iFrame or pingback. Callback on scrolling to see if someone has scrolled all the way to the bottom, like a EULA that won't let you sign unless you've seen the whole thing.
  • Could put a bunch of little trackers in a page, to make sure they proceed a normal reading pace.

Velocity of Discussion

  • rate limiting
  • token models
  • making rare commenter's comments larger
  • See more of the people you comment on. See more of people you engage in meaningful debate with, see more of people you comment negatively on. Automatic but overridable.

Velocity of content

  • If velocity is speading up, here are fuzzy things.
  • Automated unicorns to disrupt carrying forward anger
  • Break into system2 by showing an image or narrative of some kind.
  • System1 mood shift, not disrupting system2 -- showing kittens

Can we do IRB approval for a platform, offer it as a platform for undergrad discussions?