I clicked a few applauds, then decided it has no useful application so I'm no longer going to bother. It only makes sense if it's per posting.I'm not getting the rationale over it somehow being a recruitment tool. Would *you* join a forum simply because most people have more Applauds than Smites? It wouldn't matter to me one bit. In fact, I might view it as an "mommy moderated" board.(Please APPLAUD me if you AGREE.)
Ray you said it was a way for members to like or dislike a post. All Im seeing is the cumulative number, no specifics. For example I have 3+ so is there away for me to know which 3 posts of mine were liked?
I think the intent is good but in order to provide meaningful feedback, it would need to be post specific. As it stands, anyone who is so inclined could daily smite an individual. That individual would end up with lots of negative feedback, but it could solely be one person throwing the stats while everyone else opts out. It's false information. Someone dislikes me but I have no idea why. Hmm??? Not sure how that's helpful. OTOH if I posted something controversial and immediately got a dozen dislikes specific to my post, I might reconsider posting something of a similar nature in the future.
There is nothing stopping an individual from repeatedly "applaud" or "smite" an individual or even themselves (create a false account). My initial support has waned. "Like" or "Dislike" posts individually.
Quote from: Greg on April 05, 2012, 06:32:59 AMThere is nothing stopping an individual from repeatedly "applaud" or "smite" an individual or even themselves (create a false account). My initial support has waned. "Like" or "Dislike" posts individually.I share the above sentiment with Greg; just wondering if the forum software has the functionality of rating individual posts... From a sociological perspective, it is interesting how the karma points are accumulating, though. Lloyd seems to be about as polarizing as the abortion debate.
From a sociological perspective, it is interesting how the karma points are accumulating, though. Lloyd seems to be about as polarizing as the abortion debate.