Cameron Armstrong
@cameron
my guy really said “boring casters qq more”
4 replies
1 recast
12 reactions
Lauren McDonagh-Pereira
@lampphotography
Dan: We need more content. Also Dan: if you cast "too" much you will be labelled spam forever Us: Define "too much" Dan: No.
8 replies
1 recast
14 reactions
Chase Sommer
@chasesommer.eth
tbh this is pretty accurate, however if he clearly defines it then botters will know better how to cheat the system. Tricky situation for sure
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
Lauren McDonagh-Pereira
@lampphotography
Its definitely a bind. But rough guidelines help. It also concerns me because I often worry that English speakers (myself included) knee jerk label something as spam or a bot, when really its someone who wants to join our conversation, and is doing it all though Google Translate. If someone is working twice as hard as I am to be part of the conversation, I absolutely don't want to accidentally discriminate against them because their replies sound a little clunky.
3 replies
0 recast
1 reaction
Cameron Armstrong
@cameron
Totally get that, think it’s an admirable sentiment, and empathize but at internet scale you don’t have the luxury of bringing everybody along for everything Content markets in 2024 are so efficient that the onus has to be on the poster to keep up or just sit back enjoy Nobody is owed a platform 🤷♂️
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction
Chase Sommer
@chasesommer.eth
I've literally said the exact thing in a reply somewhere! Tried to find it, but could only find something slightly related. I think the clearest example of this is in /replyguys Many, if not most, of them in there are labelled as spam. But Many of them are from Asia trying to make a living. Like you said, many use AI to translate their thoughts. So yeah, it looks like spam to us in our super niche subcultre of FC, but in reality it's people genuinely trying. The irony of this all is that they're the "community" and "end users" of FC. The tech elite/english/wealthy people don't realize that these users are a part of the economy/community too. I think they're getting the short end of the stick. A tangible example in my case is that I'm building a FC mmorpg at /sands-of-sumaii. 99% of my small player base are a part of the /replyguys community. Many of them are labelled as spam if I don't follow them, but I know they're not bots because my game currently doesn't have tokenized incentives.
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
tknox.eth🟪🎩
@thompson
they dont care, unfortunately
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction