Great post, and yeah, I definitely agree there's some strange stuff going on with regards to the existing (or legacy) social media systems which are governed by central control. We have our own problems on steemit also with large token holders hiding what they want, but at least the content is always on the blockchain.
You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
@lukestokes - You: We have our own problems on steemit also with large token holders hiding what they want, but at least the content is always on the blockchain.
Can you please explain what that means?
Thanks
A large whale can flag a post with a lot of voting power just because they don't like someone, not because the post is bad or because the person violated and community standards, but simply because a whale wants to. That post would then be hidden by default in the Steemit interface so you have to click "show" to see it. It's always there on the blockchain though.
@lukestokes - oh I see what you mean, so if even I flag a comment it gets hidden, or only by Whales?
And what constitutes a whale?
NOT cool.
I would think it would take several people flagging before a comment/post is hidden.
Comments are paid out or shown/hidden based on the Steem Power of the people who vote it up or down (i.e . "flag"). If someone has a lot of Steem Power (a lot of stake in the system) they have more say in who is valuable and what is not. If they make bad decisions which harm the entire network and the value of the token, then they are harming themselves. Unfortunately, some people don't think in these terms and do it anyway.
@lukestokes - how much SP do you have to have to have this much power?
Depends on the reputation of the poster, I think. I'm not entirely sure though as a flag is just a downvote and the downvote would have to counter other upvotes.
Sorry for the delay. I'll have to ask around about how much SP one has to have b/c my votes STILL seem to do dick shit for anyone. : (
Thanks