krelnik
Graduate Poster
I started writing a gigantic OP for this thread, and realized that I might as well make it a blog post. And so I did, you can read it here:
Skeptools blog: Incentivizing online activism – a proposal.
The executive summary:
There are tons of interesting online activities that help advance skepticism, such as editing Wikipedia, rating sites in Web of Trust, reporting quacks using Fishbarrel and so on. But unlike blogging or podcasting or giving the keynote speech at TAM, these crowdsourced activities often go largely unrecognized. Wouldn't it be nice to change that?
In the blog post linked above, I explain how we might build a sort of Skeptic Foursquare game, in which skeptics could be rewarded in a fun way for engaging in these small activiites. It would gamify skepticism and thus incentivize doing the hard work of being a regular skeptic-next-door. And it would be silly and fun.
In this thread:
DO: Discuss whether you would be interested in participating in such a service.
DO: Discuss what activities and services should be encouraged and thus included in the game.
DO: Discuss what activities possibly should be excluded from the game because we already have plenty of them or for other logical reasons.
DO: Discuss the relative scoring of different activities. Should a Wikipedia edit be scored based on its size? How much is a Fishbarrel report worth?
DO: Discuss what clever and interesting badges we could offer.
DO NOT: Complain about how stupid services like Foursquare are, especially if you do not use them.
DO NOT: Complain about how gamification is totally over-hyped right now. Yes, we stipulate to that.
DO NOT: Complain that the whole thing would be an invasion of your privacy. It uses an opt-in model, so if you don't want to play, you just don't play.
Skeptools blog: Incentivizing online activism – a proposal.
The executive summary:
There are tons of interesting online activities that help advance skepticism, such as editing Wikipedia, rating sites in Web of Trust, reporting quacks using Fishbarrel and so on. But unlike blogging or podcasting or giving the keynote speech at TAM, these crowdsourced activities often go largely unrecognized. Wouldn't it be nice to change that?
In the blog post linked above, I explain how we might build a sort of Skeptic Foursquare game, in which skeptics could be rewarded in a fun way for engaging in these small activiites. It would gamify skepticism and thus incentivize doing the hard work of being a regular skeptic-next-door. And it would be silly and fun.
In this thread:
DO: Discuss whether you would be interested in participating in such a service.
DO: Discuss what activities and services should be encouraged and thus included in the game.
DO: Discuss what activities possibly should be excluded from the game because we already have plenty of them or for other logical reasons.
DO: Discuss the relative scoring of different activities. Should a Wikipedia edit be scored based on its size? How much is a Fishbarrel report worth?
DO: Discuss what clever and interesting badges we could offer.
DO NOT: Complain about how stupid services like Foursquare are, especially if you do not use them.
DO NOT: Complain about how gamification is totally over-hyped right now. Yes, we stipulate to that.
DO NOT: Complain that the whole thing would be an invasion of your privacy. It uses an opt-in model, so if you don't want to play, you just don't play.
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I'm sorry, krelnik. When I read this thread I was taken aback at how negative the responses have been. Please don't give up on skepticism. I've done more than my share of starting awful threads, killing off perfectly good ones, and being in totally over my head here most of the time.