Flagging is also a form of abuse though. You're taking something from a person that the community at large gave them. A better solution is to try talking to them one on one and asking them to fix the problem first. If there are too many to deal with then the problem lays in the incentives for this behavior and it's better to give them other incentives for doing it correctly.
Honestly though, just change the weights in the sort algorithm to take into account how many tags they have and drop their position in the list down geometrically and this problem solves itself because you will literally never see them and content that is never upvoted and commented on should just be pruned after 30 days.
I realize the increasing difficulty for the core decision influencers in here and as such I appreciate your valuable input on the AI/human coexistence topics you've raised in your last few posts - which I've read in full by the way.
It is exciting and scary at the same time on how many levels Steemit is a live experiment with unknown outcome to anybody. All we know is that there are various different stakeholders with different agendas wrestling or playing. And then there is a level to this that many might not be fully aware of ;-)
Flagging is also a form of abuse though. You're taking something from a person that the community at large gave them. A better solution is to try talking to them one on one and asking them to fix the problem first. If there are too many to deal with then the problem lays in the incentives for this behavior and it's better to give them other incentives for doing it correctly.
Honestly though, just change the weights in the sort algorithm to take into account how many tags they have and drop their position in the list down geometrically and this problem solves itself because you will literally never see them and content that is never upvoted and commented on should just be pruned after 30 days.
I realize the increasing difficulty for the core decision influencers in here and as such I appreciate your valuable input on the AI/human coexistence topics you've raised in your last few posts - which I've read in full by the way.
It is exciting and scary at the same time on how many levels Steemit is a live experiment with unknown outcome to anybody. All we know is that there are various different stakeholders with different agendas wrestling or playing. And then there is a level to this that many might not be fully aware of ;-)