Epistemic status: grumpy, not committed.
There was quite a lot of discussion of the karma system in the comments to the forum 2.0 announcement, but it didn’t seem very conclusive and as far as I know, hasn’t been publicly discussed since.
That seems enough concern that it’s worth revisiting. My worries are:
- Karma concentration exacerbates groupthink by allowing a relatively small number of people to influence which threads and comments have greatest visibility
- It leads to substantial karma inflation over time, strongly biasing recent posts to get more upvotes
Point 1) was discussed a lot in the original comments. The response was that because it’s a pseudo-logarithmic scale, this shouldn’t be much of a concern. I think we now have reasons to be sceptical of this response:
- There are plenty of people with quite powerful upvotes now - mine are currently worth 5 karma, very close to 6, and I’ve posted less than a dozen top level posts. That will give me 3-6 times the strong voting power of a forum beginner, which seems like way too much.
- While top level posts are the main concern, comments get a much lower level of interest, so the effect of one or two strong votes can stand out much more if you’re skimming through them.
- The people with the highest karma naturally tend to be the most active users, who’re likely already the most committed EAs. This means we already have a natural source of groupthink (assuming the more committed you are to a social group the more likely you are to have bought into any given belief it tends to hold). So groupthinky posts would already tend to get more attention, and having these active users have greater voting power multiplies this effect.
Point 2) is confounded by the movement and user base having grown, so a higher proportion of posts having been made in later years, when there were more potential upvoters. Nonetheless, unless you believe that the number of posts has proliferated faster than the number of users (so that karma is stretched evenly), it seems self-evident that there is at least some degree of karmic inflation.
So my current stance is that, while the magnitude of both effects is difficult to gauge because of complementary factors, both effects are probably in themselves net negative, and therefore things we should not be using tools to complement - we might even want to actively counteract them. I don’t have a specific fix in mind, though plenty were discussed in the comments section linked above. This is just a quick post to encourage discussion of alternative… so over to you, commenters!
I don't fully understand what you're saying, but my guess is that you're suggesting we should take a user's total karma and divide that by votes. I don't understand what it means to "give weight to this"—does the resulting calculation become their strong vote power? I am not being arch, I literally fully don't understand, like I'm dumb.
I know someone who has some data and studied the forum voting realizations and weak/strong upvotes. They are are totally not a nerd, I swear!
Thoughts:
A proximate issue with the idea I think you are proposing is that currently, voting patterns and concentration of voting or strong upvotes differs in a systematic way by the "class of post/comment":
I had an idea to filter for this (that is sort of exactly the opposite of yours) to downweight the karma of these comments by their environment, to get a "true measure" of the content. Also, the War in Heaven posts have a sort of frenzy to them. It's not impossible that giving everyone a 2x - 10x multiplier on their karma might contribute to this frenzy, so moderating this algorithmically seems good.
A deeper issue is that people will be much more risk averse in a system like this that awards them for their average, not total karma.
In my opinion, people are already too risk averse, in a way that prevents confrontation, but at least that leads to a lot of generally positive comments/posts, which is a good thing.
Now, this sort of gives a new incentive, to aim for zingers or home runs. This seems pretty bad. I actually don't think it is that dangerous/powerful in terms of actual karma gain, because as you mentioned, this can be moderated algorithmically. I think it's more a problem that this can lead to changes in perception or culture shifts.