The Reality of Online Reputation 265
Nicholas Carroll (of Why Unicode Won't Work On The Internet fame) has written a piece for Mindjack entitled "Spinning The Web: The Realities of Online Reputation Management". Trust me - the actual subject matter is a lot more interesting then the title *grin*. The essay is aimed toward companies online, but is applicable to individuals as well.
Erm... (Score:2, Funny)
*grin*
Reputation, Online Communities, and User Numbers (Score:4, Funny)
For example, the mere presence of words uttered by he who has a low user number shines forth radiantly upon all, bestowing in them great wisdom and happiness.
(Note: the higher user numbers are that much more removed from the Form of Wisdom and Happiness).
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:4, Funny)
Don't forget post count, that Anonymous Coward guy is extremely active on Slashdot!
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, but the content is rarely worth reading...
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:4, Insightful)
For example:
Parent post: insightful and relevant
Certain unnamed low-numbered users: immature trolls who just happened to stumble across something early on which later turned out to be big.
It still all depends on the person behind the number.
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2, Interesting)
Not to mention the foe of friends, currently I don't penalize them, but I always scrutinize those comments a bit more than usual.
Perform an experiment sometime, save a couple of older stories at -1, then using grep, gawk, sort, unique, etc..., plot the distribution of user IDs. The number of posts coming from sub 100k is quite small.
PS I wish you had linked the posts you were referring to as I haven't seen any that match that description.
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2)
Just needed to say it as only trolls replied to your post till now...
Reinout
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:5, Interesting)
--free porn links for all my fans [slashdot.org]
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:3, Insightful)
And best of all, you can do it without having to be insightful, interesting, informative, or funny -- just post pr0n!
Do you want the popularity of Tracy Lords or Esther Dyson?
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2)
Yes, but the number of fans is buried several clicks in your user profile, and thus your reputation is pretty obscured somewhere in those links.
When I read your post, it's not immediately obvious that $$$$$exyGal is a person with a good reputation (or should I say "reputation"
People with high karma can post with the "+1 Karma Bonus", but many readers disable the Karma bonus these days (I think it's off for new users by default).
I have "excellent" karma, many friends & fans, several freaks, and a good number of foes. But unless you spent a couple of minutes investigating my user profile [slashdot.org], the only "reputation" that you see is my relatively low userid.
So in many ways, my reputation is better then yours. Nya nya!
Personally, I'd like to see the number of friends & fans in the grey user box that appears with every post, but I'm sure the poor databases are already hammered without these additional reads...
But maybe I'm just a reputation whore...
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2)
But if you turn up the bonuses on your FOAF-meter, isn't that sort of a proxy... If their web of friends intersects with yours - karma bonus!
On the other face, there is no hand.
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2)
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2)
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2)
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2)
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:3, Funny)
Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha!
Oh, wait... you're serious, aren't you?
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:3)
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2)
D'oh!
Russ
Anonymous Coward = 666 (Score:2)
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:3, Funny)
Damn newbs! Don't they know I was on the internet back when it ran over tin cans and string!?
Re:Reputation, Online Communities, and User Number (Score:2)
I Google everything and everybody. (Score:5, Insightful)
Especially when I am hiring. I learn more about people and companies via Google than via resume's and marketing-heavy websites.
Granted, I take everything I read on the Internet* with a grain of salt, but information, no matter the source, is helpful in decision making.
*Even /.! For example, the "selfish routing" story from last week. Anyone who knows BGP4 knows that article, and 99% of the comments about it were unalduterated and misinformed BS.
Re:I Google everything and everybody. (Score:4, Insightful)
And my name isn't Mr. Abuser (Score:2)
My "official" email address, the one I give to people who matter, never reaches google. It doesn't exist as far as usenet is concerned. You need more than just a pinch of salt if you're using Google to research individuals.
[1] Just how stupid is that? fans and foes... Ya gotta laugh.
Your reputation ain't so hot... (Score:5, Funny)
Your reputation isn't very good. I see you were involved with some hype and computer crashes a few years ago, and caused millions of dollars in damage at some companies.
Geeze, I'd never hire you! You'd be lucky to get a job as a janitor at chicken farm!
Re:I Google everything and everybody. (Score:2)
I Googled an applicant for a support position I have available who looked pretty good on his resume.
Then I found the many profane postings on Usenet indictaing anger and conflict management issues and multiple posting advertising himself as "an escort for sophisticated ladies."
And yes, this was they guy, easily identified by a very unique name, location clues, and email addresses.
Re:I Google everything and everybody. (Score:2)
I guess how someone handles being flamed might be an indicator of some sort.
Re:I Google everything and everybody. (Score:2)
This particular character used his real name and email address, posted abusive comments, many of which were uncalled for.
I'm hiring for a tech support position which will require dealing with entry level users many of which are lawyers. Tact is everything.
Re:I Google everything and everybody. (Score:2)
Re:I Google everything and everybody. (Score:2)
Please, for the sake of your applicants, be careful when you do that. For curiosity's sake, I did a Google directory search for my real name - and got two matches back. The first was for the Georgia Registry of Sex Offenders, the second a list of soldiers killed in Viet Nam. Anyone who took this list at face value would think I'm a dead pervert.
So, I checked the sites, to see why my name was on these lists. It's not; the first list has someone on it who shares my first name. The second, someone who shares my last name.
Re:I Google everything and everybody. (Score:2)
Since hardly anyone has a unique name, this should apply to nearly everyone.
OTOH, my wife seems to have a unique name. But, on the third hand, it's also a phrase in English, so her name does get a lot of matches.
Reputation (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Reputation (Score:5, Insightful)
How about this little snippet?
This person does not even do the most cursory research on his subjects. For the uninformed, Unicode [unicode.org] assigns a unique address to every human character (i.e., letter, kanji, heiroglyph). The entire code range is 32-bit (4,294,967,296), with various text formats for addressing those codes (UTF-8 and UTF-16 being the most popular).
This person is, at best, an attention seeker. He's more likely a very public troll.
Re:Reputation (Score:2)
Re:Reputation (Score:2)
However, even at the time this article first came out there was clearly room for future expansion to a 32-bit space. And in any case, BMP is sufficient for all but the most esoteric uses. Sure, linguists studying dead or obscure languages might need special support, but really that's always going to be true. The UNICODE-troll author says he spends all his time spending arcane ancient Chinese texts. That a general-purpose standard is not exactly tailored to his needs is hardly surprising.
So I agree that the UNICODE article seemed pretty poor, and the author's reputation is low as far as I'm concerned. Picking a temporary limitation and blowing it up into an anglocentrist conspiracy is pretty lame.
To be fair though, Nicholas Carroll was only an editor of the UNICODE troll, not the author. I wish he'd edited it with rm, though. Some of his other papers are OK, though unoriginal.
Re:Reputation (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmh. Ever heard of UTF-8 encoding? If not, you probably should check it out...
Re:Reputation (Score:2)
Yes, it is. It avoids nulls and slashes, except in encoding nulls and slashes. That's all you have to do to produce acceptable POSIX filenames.
You still have to change all of your operating systems and programs.
Do you think you can wave your hand and magically add support to all the world's (sometimes very complex) scripts?
I'm tired of having to use the awkward wchar_t in C programs
Use a language where it's less awkward, or use Unicode via a different C package (the one in libglib, for example.)
not being able to use emacs (since vim and cooledit are the only text editors I've found with UTF-8 support).
You haven't looked very hard. Emacs21 has UTF-8 support, as do Yudit and kedit and several other editors.
size penalty for UNICODE? (Score:2)
Yes it does
The original post complained that UNICODE (as UCS-2) uses twice as much disk space as ASCII. The person you replied to pointed out, entirely accurately, that UTF-8 is exactly as efficient as ASCII for storing ASCII text. Similarly if most of your text is DBCS then you can simply use UCS-2 and be the same size in most cases.
Your other points are adequately answered by other posts. Of course it's not easy to support all human languages, but UNICODE makes the problem easier, not harder.
Re:Reputation (Score:2)
Other replies already covered the main points, but as to the last one, AFAIK XEmacs works nicely with UTF-8 (since version 20 or so?).
Re:Reputation (Score:2)
My harddrive is filled with pictures and music and videos and code (invariant in size with UTF-8). My bandwidth is usually filled with pictures and videos. None of this changes in size with character coding. I happen to have a large percentage of the Project Gutenberg archives on my disk - surely an unusual situation - but even doubling the size of that (again, that wouldn't happen with UTF-8 or if I kept it compressed) wouldn't make much difference. It's not that big a deal.
Re:Reputation (Score:2)
I don't have time to write an article about it myself, though, so I'll just give you some "tidbits".
Unicode/ISO 10646 has room for over a million characters. About 100,000 have been assigned so far. The "national" standards bodies of China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, S. Korea, N. Korea, Japan, and Vietnam are the primary definers of the hanzi repertoire.
The article referred to 170,000 characters, but it wasn't adding them correctly. It's as if you took the 128 characters in ASCII and added them to the 128 characters in EBCDIC and said that there were 256 characters in "English", ignoring the fact that most were duplicates and many characters used in English weren't included in either ASCII or EBCDIC. The counting is all wrong, and that's what he was doing with the world's character sets.
Unicode is not perfect, but it's by far the best approach to dealing with text in our new century. Yes, dealing with text as "just text" is inherently harder than dealing with some limited subset such as "Western text" or "Japanese text" or "Simplified Chinese text". Now that networking has made it possible to address the whole world from a single server, we need a universal text format, and Unicode is by far the best option.
The new Jon Katz? (Score:4, Funny)
Wow, almost as content-free and buzzword-driven as Jon! Care to tell us something we don't know?
Re:The new Jon Katz? (Score:2)
Easy! No Goatse.cx posts! (Score:2)
Time for a new .sig (Score:3, Funny)
Karma: Excellent (Mostly the result of successful online reputation management)
Re:Time for a new .sig (Score:2)
interesting description of /. in the article (Score:5, Funny)
From the linked story:
To form an opinion based on reading Epinions or Slashdot takes a lot more work than soaking up a newspaper headline or drooling in front of the six o'clock news. On Epinions you have to read the various reviews and weigh them against each other. On Slashdot one has to read the original article, and think, or at least wade through the posts. (my emphasis)
Which
Re:interesting description of /. in the article (Score:5, Funny)
I find it amusing that reading the psots is given as an alternative to thinking.
Bizzarro World /. (Score:3, Insightful)
Ahem [slashdot.org].
Obviously, this is some quaint usage of the term "highly evolved" of which I was previously unaware.
Hogwash (Score:2, Funny)
If anybody was truly concerned about their online reputation, slashdot would have no posts.
Re:Hogwash (Score:5, Insightful)
So if people were less concerned, slashdot would have even more posts than it does. You could raise an interesting debate about whether the steady climb in posts has been due to increased readership, or increased participation (or more accurately, how those components boil down).
Re:Hogwash (Score:2)
It's 97-3 now.
Most People Have Nothing To Say (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course a lot of silence is in people online not wanting to chime in expressedly with a "Me Too!" opinion in the presence of a well expressed position that already outlines what they would say themselves if they only could spell, write with some skill, etc. It's the nice thing about the Anonymous Cowards system at Slashdot that people can, if they'd like, post whatever weird or netiquette violating opinion anonymously without slipping in their own opinion like a bad walk with your dog.
In the end though, I think the success of an online forum's credibility and reputation depends on a couple of factors. Slashdot is very geek/tech/IP heavy in content and slant. Everyone is surprised when someone speaks out in favor of Microsoft on Slashdot even when probably 80% of the readership uses Windows at some point in a day. The **IAA's are ridiculed and revealed at Slashdot, and if we don't always hear about the neatest new gizmo from Slashdot we at least know that in the culture of Slashdot that if someone has retailed a Linux machine Vibrator that SOMEONE at Slashdot has purchased the beast and will eventually post a review on how penguins are in bed. I don't think anyone comes to Slashdot for reviews on cars, because posters at Slashdot aren't perceived as being particularly of the greasemonkey/NASCAR set usually. People will have an opinion on which spark plugs are best at Slashdot but it will be weighted against the idea that the average posters would have less real experience than say the mass of people at a classic car forum.
One of the advantages of traditional media is that even if we can know that Dan Rather probably doesn't know much about Hot Air Ballooning, we all know that before he speaks out on a story about Hot Air Ballooning that at least someone from the news department has at least implied that they have made an effort to research the sport. Of course, that implication turns on them when they don't know what they're talking about anyways but everyone should know by now that the grains of salt size difference between CNN and a random internet poster is large.
Re:Most People Have Nothing To Say (Score:3, Interesting)
True, few people would say "Hogwash" with (Score:2)
Hey, /. gets mentioned! (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, though, good article, though I think I can sum it up pretty quickly: To maintain a good reputation, tell the truth and offer good service (where applicable). Whodathunkit.
The other point is the question of when/if the Web will become something that can transform opinions... right now most of the vociferous opinion-raising is of the "preaching to the choir" sort, since if my visitor doesn't agree with me, they'll probably just leave...
Re:Hey, /. gets mentioned! (Score:2)
I think it's already happened. The best example I know is the Media Awareness Project [mapinc.org]. This is a web site that posts news stories and other media pieces related to the war on drugs-- pro or con. They have a network of folks who find such stories and post them to the site, and other folks who write letters to the editor whenever they see a story they disagree with. Odd things happen. It's interesting, for example, to see the reaction of small podunk newspapers who suddenly receive a few dozen irate letters in response to what they thought was a perfectly acceptable and innocuous editorial. Say, something everyone in the community can get behind, like "All Drug Users Must Be Shot On Sight!" It's funny, because for a few days the editors go around preening themselves in the mistaken belief that their writing was so powerful that it attracted international attention. They're invariably crestfallen and embarassed when they find out that it was just a web site that brought them their brief notoriety.
I suppose the moral here is that the web has to connect to some real-world media structures to affect those who don't rely on the web for their news.
Slashdot Commits Unicide (Score:5, Funny)
Slaughters all non-ASCII-speaking netizens, film at eleven
THE HAGUE -- Robert ?CmdrTaco? Malda, the owner of the popular technology website Slash Dot, has become one of the first U.S. citizens to be indicted by the International Criminal Court for crimes against typography. The Court, authorized by the Rome Statute and ratified by over 60 nations, is charged with the duty of prosecuting individuals for serious human rights violations such as genocide, torture, and sexual slavery.
With this prosecution, the Court seems intent on adding a new crime to their docket, the crime of ?Unicide.?
?What this ?Taco Commander? did to the international community is unconscionable,? U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan was quoted saying. ?Yesterday, there was a flourishing Unicode-speaking population, numbering in the thousands. Today, there are none. They are all silenced. Their Unicode is either blocked by this so-called ?Lameness Filter? or silently wrenched from their messages.?
Slash Dot is home to at least 580,000 citizens, who hail from every Internet-equipped country in the world. However, many more ? perhaps nearly a million ? live anonymously amongst the ranks of registered citizens.
????? ? ?????, Prime Minister of ???? ?????????????, was outraged when he heard of Slash Dot?s decision to cleanse all Unicode-speaking individuals from their website.
The White House was dismayed by the decision of the Court to prosecute an American citizen for what the President deemed, a ?politicalized persecutorial.? White House spokesman Ari Flescher announced that the U.S. would, if pressed, go forward with their recently unveiled plan to invade the Netherlands, if this prosecution was not halted. ?This is absolutely stunning,? he said. ?That the United States would be expected to even acknowledge the presence of other character sets other than ASCII is an offense in its own right. You either write in ASCII, or you?re with the terrorists.?
Slash Dot, and its parent corporation, VA Software, were unavailable for comment.
Ack! (Score:3, Funny)
Wait, I should *read* the article first, and *not* form an opinion based upon the article title? WTH? I've being doing it wrong!
What about EBay or BizRate's rating systems? (Score:5, Insightful)
EBay's seller ratings and BizRate's merchant ratings.
Both use the very powerful feedback system of actual customers being able to effectively swing a vendor's reputation.
Basically instead of slow word of mouth (how long did it take for LL Bean to get its reputation? years of word-of-mouth), both EBay and BizRate allow incredibly quick dissemination of someone's preceived reputation (and unlike many others, have good safety checks and are heavily self-policing -- just like any reputation management should be).
Actually he does mention ebay... (Score:2)
Many of these reputation managers involve rating methods, from Epinions.com's Web of Trust, to eBay's ratings (and huge anti-fraud department), to Slashdot.org's highly-evolved Meta Moderation system.
It's a very brief mention, but it's there.
Re:What about EBay or BizRate's rating systems? (Score:2, Offtopic)
--sex [slashdot.org]
Re:What about EBay or BizRate's rating systems? (Score:2)
My personal ebay fave was the guy who auctioned the opportunity to have him come to your house and administer a good beating. IIRC, it sold at about $100.
Re:What about EBay or BizRate's rating systems? (Score:2)
Grate buyar would selll anytime!!!!!!!!!! A++++++++++++!!!!
Are not necessarily good proof of one's online integrity.
Penny-auction loophole (Score:2)
I've found only their negative feedback counts in terms of how trustworthy they are: how much (no more than 0.3% for computer stuff, no more than 0.1% for anything else), what sort, and how they respond to it (as a good indicator of how they'll be to deal with if something DOES go wrong with your transaction).
Re:What about EBay or BizRate's rating systems? (Score:2)
Wow. I have to disagree on this one:
If a seller has a bad rating, do you go on buying with your eyes closed? No you don't. This doesn't mean that a good rating means you shouldn't worry. What it means is that if the guy has a bad rating, then "your mileage may vary", and you should (and will) definitely be more careful.
Therefore, eBay ratings do add value.
My momma done tol' me (Score:2, Funny)
I guess she was right. Drat.
KFG
Name Borrowing (Score:3, Informative)
Adding to the confusion, of course, there are the similar sounding names like the schizophrenic multiple "Bruce Perens" here on Slashdot, that can easily confuse the ingenue:)
Another project for Google Labs.... (Score:5, Interesting)
An internet-wide Karma system could be useful also.
read and think? (Score:4, Funny)
Nicholas Carroll must be from bizarro world ;)
Re:read and think? (Score:2)
Example: (Score:5, Funny)
Ender's Game (Score:2)
I don't think that kind of thigs would work in the actual internet... is too broad, and mostly moderated by the community. Also there is no "central" place where all interesting things happens . Google is near that, but the way you use it is very specific and user driven. And Slashdot, well, is news for nerds.
Oil Tankers? Talk Radio? (Score:5, Insightful)
In a similar vein, at present it would probably be impossible to spread a false "oil shortage" story through the Internet, as the American oil companies and mainstream media did in 1972. In fact the Internet would probably demolish such propaganda in days. In 1972, it was not until months later that a merchant marine officer told me how his oil supertanker had been held off the New Jersey coast for six weeks at the height of the "oil shortage."
Whaaat? Anybody know anything else about this? Crackpot conspiracy theory, or little known fact? Why in the world would this have been done?
The ethnic slaughters in the wake of Yugoslavia's disintegration were largely blamed on inflammatory talk radio - and the absence of contrary opinion.
Whaaat? Anybody know anything else about this?
Re:Oil Tankers? Talk Radio? (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.populist.com/01.9.letters.html
(do a find on 'shortage')
and this:
"During the Embargo, Maine's Governor, Democrat Kenneth M. Curtis, accused the Nixon Administration of "creating a managed oil shortage to force support of its energy programs." A 1973 study by Philadelphia Inquirer reporters Donald Bartlett and James B. Steele, revealed, that while American oil companies were telling the U.S. to curtail oil consumption, through a massive advertising campaign, the five largest oil companies (Exxon, Mobil, Texaco, Gulf, and Standard Oil of California) were selling close to two barrels overseas, for every barrel (42 gallons) of oil sold here. They accused the oil companies and the Federal government of creating the crisis. In 1974, Lloyd's of London, the leading maritime insurance company in the world, said that during the three months before the Embargo, 474 tankers left the Middle East, with oil for the world. During the three months at the height of the crisis, 492 tankers left those same ports. During the Embargo, Atlantic Richfield (ARCO, whose President, Thornton Bradshaw was a member of the CFR) drivers were hauling excess fuel to storage facilities in the Mojave desert. All of this evidence points to the conclusion that there was no oil shortage in 1973."
from here:
http://www.viewfromthewall.com/59crisis.htm
Re:Oil Tankers? Talk Radio? (Score:2)
We had a big tank farm in town, which kinda made the whole thing obvious.
Re:Oil Tankers? Talk Radio? (Score:2)
It looked to me like he said you couldn't have managed to spread such a story via the Internet, and in fact, that the presence of the Web as we know it now would make the feat difficult. This makes some sense.
And that he said that the 1970s media and oil companies falsified the oil shortage. This is completely new to me, and I figure somebody on slashdot has got to know something about it....
Who determines your reputation. (Score:3, Interesting)
For example I have the reputation of "a microsoft shill" or for the simple people "stupid". I have this reputation in spite of the fact that I use and like *nix products and often advocate using *nix depending on the task. My reputation came about when I started to question some of the assumptions and comments made by others. These assumptions and comments were "popular" and usually followed any discussion that included MS. By questioning the popular I became a "shill".
It strikes me as funny that in a community of "non-comformists" you can be ostracized for not conforming.
Recently I have been rebuked by some people for my opinion that Hakon Wium Lie's testing methodology and following conclusions about MS targeting opera 7 were incorrect. It was popular to say that MS is evil and it must all somehow be a conspiracy. Commentary continues to be that I am a MS apologist or mistaken, even though noone can disprove the facts I've presented.
So recently I asked the question "how does one turn the tide of public opinion". I mean if I'm labeled a MS shill because I believe (not in Microsoft but) in telling the truth. Then how do I keep telling the truth in such a way that I keep clear of the MS shill reputation? Or can I? Should I just keep quiet when anyone who is mistaken or repeats a lie about large unpopular companies.
Re:Who determines your reputation. (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, it could be argued that if Microsoft themselves had NOT in the past attempted to manipulate public opinion with fake "grass roots support" campaigns that they would have more credibility in the public eye, and fewer people would be inclined to suspect that you are planted here by Microsoft. However, since MS has already shown that it does that sort of thing (they've been caught a few times), how can anybody now realistically trust any pro-Microsoft information on popular forums such as /.? Microsoft has dug their own grave on this one - they've destroyed their own credibility.
And people (surprise surprise) really really do not like being manipulated and deceived - they remember it, and don't want to be fooled again - so they consider it better to distrust any information that might just be more lies and manipulation. DO YOU BLAME THEM? I don't.
Then how do I keep telling the truth in such a way that I keep clear of the MS shill reputation?
In short, you can't. Microsoft, with their past behaviour, has made sure of this for you. Since they do do things like plant pro-MS posts in forums like this, any reasonable person knows not to trust any post that resembles a "planted" post.
Interestingly, one of the ways that more savvy "geurilla marketers" now try to deal with the problem of erosion of public trust is to try make their plants look like objective reviewers that people can trust. For example, the slashdot crowd is much more likely to trust the opinion of someone who claims to be "a Unix user, BUT ... (something positive about MS products) ..".
The whole of corporate America seems to be currently digging their own credibility graves in this way. In the short-term, cheap deceitful strategies like fake movie fan sites, fake positive reviews, fake pro-product postings on online forums, fake "news" articles in television and newspaper media etc, all of these will in the short term increase brand "mindshare". In the longer term though, as more and more people start to realise they're being manipulated, public trust will erode to the point where people will no longer believe even genuine positive articles about a product.
When companies stop this BS, then maybe people might begin to trust your opinions again. Until then, its a one-way slide downhill.
Re:Who determines your reputation. (Score:2)
The unfortunate part is that when I hold other companies to the same standard that MS should be held to I get bashed for it.
I guess it's damned if you do damned if you don't.
Re:Who determines your reputation. (Score:2)
I guess it's damned if you do damned if you don't.
I guess so, but on the other hand, you can't please everyone - someone out there will always have a problem with what you say. I suppose the best one can do is to just always try to be as honest as possible, and conversely, someone out there will find the value in what you say. There may many "rabidly" anti-MS people on /., and they are probably the most vocal, but there are probably plenty other (probably more knowledgable people) who are capable of seeing what Microsoft does do right, and will get something out of your post.
Personally I'm very anti-Microsoft because their products and their APIs are mostly of shockingly bad quality, in my experience. But they do get some things right, sometimes. And although buggy, their products do fill most of the needs that they are supposed to, and this is an important point that some OSS developers miss. In my opinion, software is bad everywhere at the moment, not just Microsoft. Programmers across the board (from commercial to OSS) could do with a bit of constructive criticism. Currently we seem to have a lot of developers who just (a) blindly copy everything of someone elses, even the bad stuff and (b) "re-invent the wheel, badly". Although to be fair, there are some really high quality software products out there, in both OSS and proprietary.
Re:Who determines your reputation. (Score:2)
I agree wholeheartedly with your points.
Re:Who determines your reputation. (Score:2, Interesting)
Many of us aren't as dogmatic as that and/or we're capable of dragging our dogmas out for amusement purposes but know how to stow it away under our seat when it's time for the plane to land.
The concept of 'online community' needs a lot more examination than it's ever received. The 'gee whiz' days when articles and interviews in Mondo 2000 magazine seemed fresh and new, and that there was a 'revolution' in human relations happening have now passed.
One of the books that I feel does the best job of debunking the concept of an 'Online Community' is 'The Future Does Not Compute Transcending the Machines in Our Midst' by Stephen L. Talbott. It was published by O'Reilly & Associates back in 1995. Talbot is one of the long term employees at O'Reilly, he's a senior editor (or was in 1995). In the book he talks about the newness and idealism, and drags out quotes from some of the most starry-eyed idealists, in the end debunking much of their hype. It's a must-read that almost nobody who has read.
Wow, I just did a search to find a good citation of Talbott's book and discovered that the full text is available online here [praxagora.com] for free. Everybody check it out. Hopefully, ummm, the fact that it's available for free online won't reduce it's credibility. It's easy these days to download something and stow it away and forget to ever read it.
Anyhow, don't sweat it that a gathering of the detris of the old battles of Microsoft vs. Macintosh, Microsoft vs. OS/2, Microsoft vs. Amiga, etc. etc. consider you a shill for not sharing their pathological hatred of the company. Their 'side' in the battle of the titans 'lost' and they'll never get over it. It's a shame that they chose Linux as their gathering place, cuz it's so cool otherwise.
Re:Who determines your reputation. (Score:2)
Re:Who determines your reputation. (Score:2)
Online Rep same as "Local Rep" w/ BBB .... (Score:5, Interesting)
I have 10 negative comments out of 1500 on eBay. To the average buyer this means little. To the "I sit at home all day and like to be mean on Holidays" crowd, it's a flag and they agree with the OTHER 10 people. To the second person, I have a pattern of bad customer service. This is one reason I think ebay should make it as difficult to leave negative comments; as they make getting a credit for fees. (File Complaint after 7 days from auction, Wait 10 days for a response, File Non Paying bidder, wait 10 more days, apply for credit.)
The Better Business Bureau is no different. The ONLY way to get a complaint removed from your file or get it listed as resolved is DO EXACTLY what the Plaintiff says. I don't mean, just refund, if that's the case, but compensate and send a letter of apology if the Plaintiff requested it. Some people can not be satisfied, and some people get twisted pleasure out of misery.
It's hard to know a fair system. I think complaintants should have profiles too, This is one GOOD thing about eBay, you can view the "Feedback About Others" - in EVERY CASE the users that have left me negative, A) Did so by accident, B)Have a high percent of negatives on their feedback, or C) A high percent of bad experiences (as evidenced by their "FeedBack About Others")
It's one reason I like the "Karma" on /. - one is able to moderate more, the more Karma one has. One builds Karma by getting high scores for Insightful or Interesting comments, loses Karma by posting offtopic, negative, or stupid comments.
It is the fault of the complaintant if a transaction goes beyond the one step of asking/commenting nicely "There's something wrong, how can WE fix it?"
The customer is always right no matter what AS LONG as they are rational, professional, and thankful.
I Was Pissed When I Posted That (Score:4, Insightful)
Trouble is, people get in from a heavy night out, check email, check slashdot, then post some complete crap that you later regret.
Moral, Don't Drink and Post.
AHAHAHAHAHA (Score:2, Troll)
In other words, a complete and utter moron.
Seriously, after that Unicode article of his, anyone who knows anything about i18n can tell you this fellow is an idiot who does not do his research, and doesn't understand the things he does research. Just ignore him.
Re:AHAHAHAHAHA (Score:2, Insightful)
They mention /.'s Moderation system! (Score:2)
wait, 'highly-evolved'?
Sounds like the work of an Online reputation manager!
screw the article - that is a freaky desktop (Score:2, Funny)
Were I a serial killer that decapitated my victims and then froze the heads for later perusal and admirement (is that even a word) - then I'd totally have that picture as my desktop background.
as a whole, the article raises some good points, but there were also parts that I disagreed with on many points - hell, the broad sweeping mention that the airline industry on the web was doomed from the start and then listing the reason as no face to face contact? fuck that, I disagree.
but this post isn't about my disagreement, it is about the scary blue head.
fear the head.
Spammers (Score:2)
I've always thought that spammers posessed the reputation of Cow Shit or perhaps a rabid dripping Goat's Penis. Pond scum seems too mild a term.
Reputation, and all that (Score:4, Interesting)
During the dot-com collapse, I regularly received hate mail, and threatening phone calls. Sometimes from angry CEOs. But not because I was wrong.
There is little joy in having been right about the dot-com collapse and the ensuing depression. Things are worse than I'd expected. I foresaw the collapse of the dot-coms in early 2000 (it wasn't hard if you can read a balance sheet), suspected the trouble at Enron, but had no idea so many old-economy companies would go under. I was expecting a flight to quality.
So I have a good reputation, but as a Cassandra.
What am I predicting now? We're years away from a stock market turnaround. Stock prices are still way too high by historical standards. We haven't reached the bottom yet. That's just from the numbers; the war situation may make things worse.
Re:did you hear... (Score:2, Interesting)
Many of these reputation managers involve rating methods, from Epinions.com's Web of Trust, to eBay's ratings (and huge anti-fraud department), to Slashdot.org's highly-evolved Meta Moderation system.
These seem important to devotees of those web sites, and techies in particular are entranced by voting schemes. However, compared to the vast readership of a reputation manager like the Associated Press, with tens of millions of readers, or newscaster Paul Harvey, with enormous credibility and over 10 million devoted listeners, they are but a drop in the bucket, promising though they may be.
You see, sirs, you don't count. All of you taken together, even given your collective ability to cripple almost any site on the net, don't count.
For the humor challenged, :P
Re:Is it legal? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Building reputation. (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes. I got an account here after posting anonymous for years - just like you. It took me a week or two to get my karma up to the +1 bonus. Everything changes when you have an account - you post more garbage just so that things will get moderated up so that the next time, when you DO have something intelligent to say people will take note (either because you have lots of "fans" or because of your +1 bonus, or because they've seen you around elsewhere).
This sucks, to be frank, because you suddenly become conscious of how many other posters are doing the same things. Of the 100-200 regular posters you see on Slashdot every few days, i'd say well over half of them are "karma-whoring" or just posting garbage... which is way more than i thought before i had an account. It's really sad to see that a site i took fairly seriously for a few years is much closer to a popularity contest than anything else. I never took it much more seriouly than usenet, but then i was reading usenet seven or either years ago before trolls became ubiqutous there, also.
I think at the end of the day, online forums are always going to suffer from these problems. Either everyone posts anonymously, in which case you don't get a community (plus you get lots of -1 level adolescent garbage) or most people post with an account, in which case you get the community playing favorites and the trolls coming out to play. What i think might be a nice idea is to have a filter on Slashdot to allow ONLY Anonymous Coward posts. That's it. I'd be curious to look at some of the discussions arising from that.
(Posting anonymously in the hope moderators still care about ACs.)
Re:Over-estimating the influence of mainstream med (Score:2)
So... you're flatly contradicting one of the central theses of the article, which is that the mainstream media conveys a more coherent opinion, consistently, to more people, than any website can--or probably ever will--do.
Do you have any particular reason for holding this opinion? Have you noticed that people's opinions of Microsoft vary not with the opinion of Slashdot, but with the opinion of the mainstream media? Have you noticed that both Ebay and Yahoo, the purely online nature of their business notwithstanding, rely heavily on advertisements in the mainstream media, and enjoy extensive mainstream news coverage? Can you name any Internet-based company with a reputation that has been built without recourse to mainstream opinion-building?
Google, maybe, but without a proper statistical survey, I don't know. Do you?