Experiment: Reaction-Ballot Voting
This open thread is using an new experimental voting system: reaction-ballot voting.
In addition to voting on a comment's overall quality, you can also vote separately on a number of axes, and apply a small set of emoji reactions. Try out and discuss this voting system here! Notes:
- Voting on each axis is weighted according to the voter's karma the same way as votes are in the regular voting system. All axes can be strong-voted with click-and-hold. The commenter's karma is only affected by your vote on the "overall" access, not your vote on any of the other axes.
- This is one experiment among several. Bugs are possible. We're interested in what effect this has on the quality of conversation, what the experience of voting in this system is like, and what the experience of skimming a thread and seeing these scores is like.
- The user interface for this voting system doesn't work well on touch/mobile devices. Third-party clients such as GreaterWrong will only be able to see and cast overall votes, but should work fine otherwise.
Please tell us what you think! Love it/hate it/think it should be different? Let us know.
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After this and the previous experiments on jessicata's top level posts, I'd like to propose that these experiments aren't actually addressing the problems with the karma system: the easiest way to get a lot of karma on LessWrong is to post a bunch (instead of working on something alignment related), and the aggregate data is kinda meaningless and adding more axis doesn't fix this. The first point is discussed at length on basically all sites that use upvote/downvotes (here's one random example from reddit I pulled from Evernote), but the second isn't. Given an example post, what does it mean that, say, 15 people upvoted it and 3 people downvoted it?
It means nothing.
There is an assumption that this aggregation actually is useful to the user and I'd like to push back on that. Even ignoring sockpuppeting (hi Eugene) and offsite brigading (hi [REDACTED]), how is a total score of "12" supposed to help me? How does a score of 12 predict whether I'd like this comment or not? Adding a separate agree/disagree sum (like on jessicata's posts) or a set of additional tags (like here) doesn't address this.
Here's a more interesting experiment that's admittedly much more disruptive and difficult to pull off: leave the upvote/downvote buttons, but completely hide total karma scores entirely from the user. Then do something like surface the comments in the order that LessWrong predicts the viewing user will upvote/take no action/downvote. My downvote might uprank a comment for someone else, making voting more valuable for everyone. This still feels vaguely Goodheart-y and is more of a starting point, but seems much more valuable than the current system.
I hadn't seen the experiments on Jessicata's posts before, and I assume others will have not as well, so here's a link to one of the posts featuring the experiment. (It's a two-axis thing, with 'overall' and 'agreement' as the two axes. Part of me prefers that setup to the one used in this experiment)