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Topic: A Song of Vices and Ire: Alternate Account Campaign Enrollment (Read 410 times)

member
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Merit: 56
With bitcoin based payouts it does not really matter. Although to me it does not seem fair if the places are highly desirable and limited.

With tokens then you should not allow alts if it is possible to prevent them. That is not to say from a reputation pov that they are essentially untrustworthy but only that it should be strongly discouraged.

legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 2218
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We do, in fact, have an example of a user who participates in multiple campaigns with publicly-announced alternate accounts: hilariousandco, hilariousetc.

You forgot to add hilarious* u=1424594 is an alt of hilariousandco u=164822 and also has a confirmed second alt of hilariousetc u=397737

http://archive.is/p50G7#selection-5631.0-5631.63 / http://archive.ph/EtcLc#selection-10385.0-10393.57

The problem you ultimately have with alts / known or otherwise is that they will eventually give each-other merits, or trust wall/feedback (or even default trust) and put themselves onto DT to get a higher payout from any campaigns they are posting in.

As we've seen once someone is on DT as hilarious is, they then use their only bargaining chip to slap others with distrust such as when I posted (the already known) information on his trust/feedback wall.



(before hilarious clicks reply to re-flame and or troll, perhaps he should go and read these posts http://archive.ph/mXJMk#selection-5735.0-5743.56 / http://archive.ph/BRI0o#selection-8803.0-8833.3 / http://archive.ph/hrHEv#selection-2365.0-2789.2 / http://archive.ph/Pqj9p#selection-9093.0-9111.2 / http://archive.ph/e3EyL )
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 8909
https://bpip.org
I'm open to changing my mind on this  - just wanted to make sure you knew this was in regard to the negative feedback (and perhaps flags, though I have not done full dives on trust yet) that was created because of this communal consensus against alts.

About that - considering that most reputable campaign managers are in DT, it would probably make more sense if it went like this:

Someone spots alts in a campaign -> informs the manager -> manager tags and/or flags them (or not) -> others tag them and/or support the flag once the manager confirms they're abusing the campaign.

Instead of:

Someone spots alts in a campaign -> TAG!!!!!

But a neutral rating is fine and probably desirable in either case, as is public shaming. I would definitely want to know about users sockpuppeting their way into sig campaigns, regardless of how lenient the manager is.
copper member
Activity: 2562
Merit: 2504
Spear the bees
Bottom line: it makes business sense for the campaigns to do what they're doing. Whether its for budget management purposes, or for better ROI, or for better quality - it's up to the campaigns.
I can accept that, but from a reputation standpoint, I'm still somewhat standing in my original soil - I'm going to let these ideas fester for a bit from an external perspective and analyze the discussion before making any further replies.

I'm open to changing my mind on this  - just wanted to make sure you knew this was in regard to the negative feedback (and perhaps flags, though I have not done full dives on trust yet) that was created because of this communal consensus against alts.

Lifting the post limit for everyone is probably not going to happen since it would blow the budget of a campaign. But getting one personal exception from one campaign manager if you're an exceptional poster should be easier than convincing everyone to change their campaign rules for every participant, right?
I can accept this as a sensible solution if we are strictly talking campaign-side (that of business and not of ideological values).
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 8909
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~

Might be true. Trolls are trolling even now so it's hard to say if a transparent logically justified exception would make much of a difference (come to think of it, I don't really know why hilarious uses two accounts).

Along those lines, simply raising/removing the limit of paid posts might be less cataclysmic - some campaigns would probably disappear since they couldn't afford to pay farmers churning out posts 18 hours a day, and some would have to drop a few (or a lot of) users to make space for the farmers.

Bottom line: it makes business sense for the campaigns to do what they're doing. Whether its for budget management purposes, or for better ROI, or for better quality - it's up to the campaigns.
copper member
Activity: 2184
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But getting one personal exception from one campaign manager if you're an exceptional poster should be easier than convincing everyone to change their campaign rules for every participant, right?

This is a good point, but imagine the cataclysmic fallout if DarkStar_ were to allow both of Hilarious' accounts into ChipMixer.  The kvetching would lead to countless threads by numerous trolls across half a dozen boards, and would last for months.  There would be accusations of favoritism, inside dealings, conflicts of interest, and who knows what else.  To a large extent it would be difficult to justify and harder to defend against the allegations.

If the accounts were not publicly known as alts, but the manager allowed the exception he would be at the mercy of the user keeping the accounts' connection a secret.  Should the manager accept risking his reputation to allow one exceptional user to register an alt?  If the accounts and the exception ever do become exposed the fallout would be even more cataclysmic in proportion.
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 8909
https://bpip.org
Campaign managers can make exceptions to their rules as well. This sometimes happens with red trust. It can happen with alts too. If someone wants to hire an account farm despite the rules saying "no alts" - they can. I think the real problem some account farmers might have is that they don't want to disclose their alts so they can't ask for an exception. They want the "no alts" rule to not exist at all so that it doesn't bite them a years later if the alts are uncovered.

Another option would be to ask for a higher post limit and/or a higher payment, or essentially to take two or more spots in a campaign by one user. Lifting the post limit for everyone is probably not going to happen since it would blow the budget of a campaign. But getting one personal exception from one campaign manager if you're an exceptional poster should be easier than convincing everyone to change their campaign rules for every participant, right?
legendary
Activity: 3584
Merit: 4420
If you don't have some order on the forum then chaos will ensue. IMO the not enrolling or allowing multiple accounts in a campaign is an excellent rule.

If campaign managers open campaigns up and allow anyone to have alts enrolled too, we open the forum up for more corruption then people already believe there is.

Certain mangers will open a campaign and most certainly fill it with their accounts only. Other members will be left in the dust.

It really would turn into a monopoly of sorts. Keep the status quo as is and at least the selection process is somewhat fair.
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The forum rules about alts leave a lot of room for freedom and abuse, obviously.  I don't see an issue with campaign managers implementing no-alt rules for their campaigns.  It might be primarily an effort to reduce spam (which we can all agree is a good thing,) but we can't say that's the only reason.  I'd like to believe that the more successful managers also have an inherent belief in fairness.  There's also the level of exposure, as others have mentioned.  There are a lot of good posters on this forum who frequent different parts of the forum.  Spreading positions around will only help the campaign reach more boards and therefor expand exposure.  That's unlikely to happen if one user enrolls several alts.


What has always confused me... is the fervour with which some folks seem to hunt out these alt accounts who are "abusing campaigns"... I'm not sure if they see it as an "easy" way to score some merits, as opposed to other forms of contribution to the forum?

That's an expected result of a decentralized trust system.  Some members are certain to be more concerned about some types of abuse than others.  In my opinion this is a sign that the system is working.  It's also fair to point out that enrolling alts in the same campaign isn't the only way alts are abused.  It may be the most common way to justify a red-tag, which can then prevent the alt from being abused in other ways.  Fattening up alt accounts with rank and trust to be sold, used to scam, or to provide self-escrow are only some examples.  Nipping these alt farms in the bud could prevent a lot of pain for the community later.


I suspect in the majority of the ICO/IEO/altcoin campaigns, neither the project owners nor the campaign managers really care... about alts or spam... they just want maximum exposure for the 0.00000002BTC worth of tokens they're going to have to give out to the participants... if they even bother to give any out

I can't disagree with this sentiment.  But the accounts enrolled in these shit-coin shilling schemes aren't likely to ever rank up and become problematic in other ways.  The merit system has pretty much solved that issue.  There are still a few sophisticated account farmers who are able to rank up alts despite the merit system, which in my opinion is the bigger issue.
legendary
Activity: 2296
Merit: 2262
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Interesting argument..

To me it breaks down to: Is a user breaking a campaign's rules scamming the campaign? Should they be tagged for scamming? Is it a deceptive breach of contract?
I think I would trust someone less if I knew them to break such petty contracts..

I don't think it should be a forum rule and that campaigns should be able to make it a private rule for their campaign, or not..

Some can post well from multiple accounts, like TP..

What has always confused me... is the fervour with which some folks seem to hunt out these alt accounts who are "abusing campaigns"... I'm not sure if they see it as an "easy" way to score some merits, as opposed to other forms of contribution to the forum? Huh

I have thought about this also... It seems like an effort that can be made to increase social status, and maybe some just really like lording over others..

One could also see it as battling spam, which it may in many cases, but may not in all cases..

TP could have HB on chipmixer and it wouldn't bother me a bit unless TP was breaking contract with CM by doing so..
HCP
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 4314
What has always confused me... is the fervour with which some folks seem to hunt out these alt accounts who are "abusing campaigns"... I'm not sure if they see it as an "easy" way to score some merits, as opposed to other forms of contribution to the forum? Huh

Surely, it is up to the campaign managers to decide whether or not people should be allowed to enrol with alts... in addition, it should be the campaign managers, who are actually paid to be managing the campaign in the first place to be actively managing and checking for this... if required by their campaign rules.

I suspect in the majority of the ICO/IEO/altcoin campaigns, neither the project owners nor the campaign managers really care... about alts or spam... they just want maximum exposure for the 0.00000002BTC worth of tokens they're going to have to give out to the participants... if they even bother to give any out Roll Eyes

The current system of linking all these accounts and redtagging them is generally just a never-ending game of "whack-a-mole" with low rank spammers/bounty hunters... personally I find the "report to moderator" system works quite well, as that is what is most likely to have the greatest (monetary) impact on these accounts... having their posts deleted and their post count reduced.
legendary
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This is under the assumption that users exceed the maximum. You might get a few extra posts from those that are borderline spammers (take a look at some of the lower-end campaigns) but most of the time you will see people just post up to the cap and stop.
Moreover, if they wanted more posts, they could simply ask for that post requirement. Am I wrong?
Most learn to exceed it by a minimum of 1 or 2,  otherwise they risk not getting paid should a post get deleted before the final count is in. I believe a decent amount of these users do have other accounts they are either still trying to grow, or are registered in a different campaign. So they move to that account to complete the posting; sometimes they alternate between and talk to themselves.

You are right that any campaign could increase the post count they are looking for, but this also comes with the risk of passing over quality posters with lower frequency of posts. It's silly that a post buried in the page 26 carries the same weight as say an OP that gets read viewed 100+ times. It's just the advertising metrics you can work with here on the forum.

So I still just fall back on the issue with multiple accounts in a single campaign being that the participant is already being paid to post for that campaign to a minimum. This minimum though shouldn't be viewed as "piece work" where you can come along with a second account to get paid for recreating it. Minimums are generally in place because people have varying talents and abilities, and when you employ someone you have a set minimum that makes them worth employing.

In this hypothetical are the alt accounts supposed to identify that they are an alt? Not sure if I missed that. If not this opens up further cheating potential  against the  advertiser. The multiple accounts could reasonably recreate say 60% of their posts in a similar fashion, or just "conversationally" post their own back and forth.

My entire stance is from the perspective of someone paying to advertise on the forum. I don't think that this campaign standard has anything to do with spam suppression. I see it solely as people not being able to grab a second paycheck for 1 job.
legendary
Activity: 2310
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Preventing alternate accounts from enrolling in campaigns is stupid. It does not prevent people who secretly use alts and it does not prevent spam. Preventing someone from joining because they have poor post quality is better than preventing someone from joining because they might have poor post quality because of the multiple accounts.

1.) Preventing alternate accounts from enrolling in campaigns is good.
2.) Preventing users with poor post quality from enrolling in campaigns is good.

These things should not be contrasted; they are beautiful when applied simultaneously.

My opinion on alternative accounts: even if the user is a genius and can write great posts from multiple accounts he robs other campaign participants since the payment is intended for the user, not the account.
Bounty campaigns sets limits on paid posts for one purpose: they set some maximum that they are willing to pay one user. Using alternative accounts helps disrupt these plans.
legendary
Activity: 3332
Merit: 6809
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Until theymos is replaced, you can ignore most rules and dance around like CH & trolls do. I have nothing against your suggestion, other than the increasing visibility of forum staff mostly being worthless.
You're most likely right, Lauda.  On the other hand, I wouldn't want to see bitcointalk run like some other forums I've been a part of, where you can't use profanity and even the slightest controversial post is deleted.  The forum wouldn't have to become like that if there was a different admin, of course, but I've come to appreciate the freedom here.  There's a certain laissez faire mentality from up top that I appreciate, and if that means campaign abusers don't get banned by the mods, so be it.  It's always been the community that's taken care of those idiots via negative feedback or whatever, and personally I'm cool with that.

And don't start with the bullshit of a great poster being able to post all over the forum LOL. Or being able to make 100+ posts per week without negative effects on quality.
100 posts is pushing it, definitely.  There are members who might come close, but they'd have to spend an awful lot of time creating those posts and the average person just isn't going to do that.  Especially not someone with multiple accounts enrolled in a campaign or campaigns.

And Jesus, actmyname....reading the OP here makes me feel like I'm back in college in statistics 101.  That was such a long time ago I'm too embarrassed to admit how long ago it really was.
legendary
Activity: 2674
Merit: 2965
Terminated.
And don't start with the bullshit of a great poster being able to post all over the forum LOL. Or being able to make 100+ posts per week without negative effects on quality.
Even 2 accounts is an undesirable outcome practically for everyone. Who'd want me (or anyone else for that matter) to post several thousand posts per week over tens of accounts? Businesses? Users? Nobody.
legendary
Activity: 3654
Merit: 8909
https://bpip.org
How about the variety of posts. DarkStar_ for example has in some cases specifically requested applicants from certain boards apparently because Chipmixer wants more exposure in those boards. On the flip side, I don't think they want to spend too much of their budget on one user who posts e.g. entirely in Gambling.

And don't start with the bullshit of a great poster being able to post all over the forum LOL. Or being able to make 100+ posts per week without negative effects on quality.

In the end it's a business decision despite some account farmers suggesting that it might have something to do with politics. If some entity, like Yobit recently, thinks it's ok to have a massive campaign with a 20-post daily limit, they'll do it. And then they'll reduce it to 5 posts per day, I wonder why.
legendary
Activity: 2674
Merit: 2965
Terminated.
For what purpose?
What is this naive question?
This question is intended as a question for you. I do not know your thoughts in their entirety and this is merely an act of communication: no ulterior motive. I just want to make sure I understand your whole argument rather than create an accidental strawman.
Quite unfortunate.

Are you going to fight those who attack users that enrol several accounts in campaigns actively?
Sure: after all, as of the time writing this post, I still see no logical precursor for this rule.
If there are no such users, keep the rule.
I don't follow. The situation you are creating is one where the rule is implemented either directly via a genuine rule or indirectly via retaliation from other users.
All I am asking is if you, and people who are supporting this, are going to defend the people who are going to use it and get attacked for using it. Simple as that.

Like I said, this is trivial; I could fill probably half of all decent BTC running campaign without blinking. Is such a case a desired outcome? At least with a rule, there's a deterrent in the form of punishment (you'd get kicked out and likely neg. rated afterwards ruining your accounts).
It is equally trivial to prevent your accounts from being linked. Again, I fail to see the practicality of the rule -- I might understand the rationale once you indicate the negatives of an individual's account list encompassing a significant portion of the signature campaign.
Given the amount of people that got caught "trivially preventing account-linking", this argument does not stand.
copper member
Activity: 2562
Merit: 2504
Spear the bees
For what purpose?
What is this naive question?
This question is intended as a question for you. I do not know your thoughts in their entirety and this is merely an act of communication: no ulterior motive. I just want to make sure I understand your whole argument rather than create an accidental strawman.

Are you going to fight those who attack users that enrol several accounts in campaigns actively?
Sure: after all, as of the time writing this post, I still see no logical precursor for this rule.

If there are no such users, keep the rule.
I don't follow. The situation you are creating is one where the rule is implemented either directly via a genuine rule or indirectly via retaliation from other users.

Like I said, this is trivial; I could fill probably half of all decent BTC running campaign without blinking. Is such a case a desired outcome? At least with a rule, there's a deterrent in the form of punishment (you'd get kicked out and likely neg. rated afterwards ruining your accounts).
It is equally trivial to prevent your accounts from being linked. Again, I fail to see the practicality of the rule -- I might understand the rationale once you indicate the negatives of an individual's account list encompassing a significant portion of the signature campaign.
If you choose to enroll multiple accounts in one campaign you are essentially ripping off your employer. Most campaigns have a minimum post count to qualify for payment, that doesn't mean that is the full scope of work for the week. That is just the bare minimum. Reaching this doesn't mean the company is getting fair value for their advertising dollars if you were to say load in account 2 then 3 for a total of 75 posts being paid 3X. When in reality they should have received the 75 posts under 1 account for 1X payment.
This is under the assumption that users exceed the maximum. You might get a few extra posts from those that are borderline spammers (take a look at some of the lower-end campaigns) but most of the time you will see people just post up to the cap and stop.

Moreover, if they wanted more posts, they could simply ask for that post requirement. Am I wrong?
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 2036
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This is more a social norm than a rule. The forum has nothing against multiple accounts in a campaign, it's indifferent at best to the whole system. This rule is in place by individual campaign managers, and the companies that hire them. The latter is why the rule would stay in place. They are paying an individual for their service - advertise this signature with that account for whatever period of time.

If you choose to enroll multiple accounts in one campaign you are essentially ripping off your employer. Most campaigns have a minimum post count to qualify for payment, that doesn't mean that is the full scope of work for the week. That is just the bare minimum. Reaching this doesn't mean the company is getting fair value for their advertising dollars if you were to say load in account 2 then 3 for a total of 75 posts being paid 3X. When in reality they should have received the 75 posts under 1 account for 1X payment.

Now enrolling in separate campaigns can be likened more to holding several different jobs. There is no issue there, you can offer to only advertise for 1 campaign for a larger payrate(unlikely) or continue to manage multiple accounts in separate campaigns.
legendary
Activity: 2674
Merit: 2965
Terminated.
For what purpose?
What is this naive question? Use your head and base off of past instances of this occurring (campaign related or not).

And in this instance, if the user is found out, this is irrespective of whether the rule is implemented or not. Any retaliation against the activity would be that of a community action. In this case, I would rather know the public alternate account linkages between identities rather than create an incentive for people who do in secret.
Are you going to fight those who attack users that enrol several accounts in campaigns actively? If there are no such users, keep the rule. Like I said, this is trivial; I could fill probably half of all decent BTC running campaign without blinking. Is such a case a desired outcome? At least with a rule, there's a deterrent in the form of punishment (you'd get kicked out and likely neg. rated afterwards ruining your accounts).

or willing to support left leaning ideas supported by the ‘mob’ in order to keep his income (such as DireWolfM14),
Cute little wanker you are. Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy
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