Poll: Enhancing the "Mute" Feature

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Poll Mute.jpg

Hello Steemians, we want to hear your thoughts on whether we should expand the “Mute” feature on steemit.com (specifically “Condenser” the open source software that powers steemit.com and a number of other sites) to include hiding comments on a blog from visitors to that blog if the author has Muted the commenter.

TL;DR

Leave a comment starting with “YES” if you believe that when you Mute another user that their comments should be hidden from your blog for other Steem users.

Leave a comment starting with “NO” if you believe that when you Mute another user that their comments should remain visible to the visitors of your blog even if you have Muted them.

After "YES" or "NO" you should feel free to share any additional thoughts you might have on the topic.

Ownership

At Steemit, we take very seriously the concept of “ownership.” Steem enables users to retain ownership of their social information and we believe that great Steem applications should play to this strength. But this question isn’t always straightforward, especially at the user interface level. It can also conflict with some people’s views on censorship.

Non-Consensus

One thing that will never change is that any information posted to the Steem blockchain will be open and accessible to anyone. This feature change we are suggesting would have no impact on that whatsoever. All comments will always remain on-chain, and any developer is always free to provide an interface that displays that information. We call these types of changes “non-consensus.”

Free Speech

We believe that you should always have the right to make your views public, but you do not have the right to harass, spam, or otherwise pollute someone else’s space. A user’s blog (and in the future their Community) should be a place where they feel safe to speak their mind. What good is censorship-resistance if people are censoring themselves out of fear?

Giving users the ability to hide any toxic elements from their space, while still leaving every other user free to make that determination for themselves, will enable everyone to express themselves more freely. What good is freedom if people don’t feel safe enough to use it?

Improving UX

We think that expanding the “Mute” feature walks the right line between preserving a person’s right to speak while also preserving a user’s right to protect their property and even enhance its value. We believe that this could dramatically improve the user experience on steemit.com by enabling users to ensure that the visitors to their blog see only high quality comments.

Open Source

As always, the fact that both steemit.com and Steem are open source ensures that if anyone does not like how the information stored on the blockchain is displayed, they can easily launch their own version of the site, or use one of the many alternative user interfaces that already exist.

But what do you think? This is a feature that is intended to improve the user experience on steemit.com, so if you don’t think it will do that, be sure to vote “NO” in the comment section below.

When SMT Tho?!

Since we know people will say it, implementing this feature is trivial and will not delay any ongoing development efforts. That ease of implementation is a consequence of our Hivemind software which was developed by @roadscape (a/k/a “Hive”) and makes it extremely easy to alter how user interfaces interpret data stored on the blockchain.

If you'd like to learn more about the progress we've been making on SMTs, be sure to check out the recent post by Steemit Blockchain Engineer @gerbino.

The Poll!

But we digress! This post is about whether or not we should expand the “Mute” function on steemit.com.

Leave a comment starting with “YES” if you believe that when you Mute another user that their comments should be hidden from your blog for other Steem users.

Leave a comment stating only “NO” if you believe that when you Mute another user that their comments should remain visible to the visitors of your blog even if you have Muted them.

Don't hesitate to leave any additional feedback, including suggestions for other features you'd like to see added to steemit.com.

The Steemit Team



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(Edited)

YES. Users need more control over their own blogs.

I would also like to see the number of witness votes per account lowered from 30 to 10 or 5, to better decentralize the leadership.

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YES

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(Edited)

NO!

After I got to the bottom of the comments I realized the Circle Jerkoffs will just try to hide the truth guys like me! How will we expose their scams? This is supposed to be a free blockchain. The scammers should just leave!

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Yes.
Y u no use dpoll? ;)

Posted using Partiko Android

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(Edited)

need to risk keys and stuff
Might even require active key for all I know

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Need to risk keys and
Stuff Might even need active
Key for all I know

                 - transisto


I'm a bot. I detect haiku.

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No.

Why don't enable a KYC feature for every user like years ago Steem Verify did? I think that this is a great feature to avoid spam, abuse, hate speach and another millions of conflicts that happens here.

Posted using Partiko Android

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Nothing is stopping any 3rd party from offering KYC and an interface that only shows content posted to Steem by KYCed users. That's why we will never implement it ourselves, because we believe that steemit.com should be open to everyone. In addition, you should be extremely careful with who you give your personal identity information to. I don't know of this service, but I would be highly, HIGHLY cautious about who I give my personal information to and would suggest anyone reading this comment to think extremely long and hard about using ANY service that requests this information. We will NOT.

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(Edited)

I hope it should be open. It is kinda closed off to me at the moment!WTF! FIX ME PLEASE!

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YES PLEASE! I & Many Other have raised this concern, mostly a Block Feature is What we had in Mind, but if I get to not see people who harass me on my blog with this feature, it's equally good. I believe as content creators we should have the right to exclude some people from our space if they bring about negative energy all the time!

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Thanks for the thoughtful response! We hear you loud and clear!

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Of course you do, you only listen to the echoes, derp,...

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(Edited)

YES

But I said I only want brown M&Ms in the green room.

Edit: I'll just add the stipulation that certain community accounts such as anti-abuse accounts be let through no matter what.

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lol, you must be a pretty great guitar player with those kind of demands

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(Edited)

Hey @andrachy Are there any plans to rid the platform of the most prolific abuser on the platform?
I am sure you know who i am referring to. He has hundreds of accounts and makes death threats when he has a really bad day

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Yes. May I suggest if you mute someone that person nor you can comment on each others content?

Posted using Partiko Android

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No.

Unless detractors are allowed to speak up publicly the truth gets hidden.

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(Edited)

Absolutely not.
Plagiarists, identity thieves, or other fraudsters will mute comments from anyone calling them out on their actions.
This means the @steemcleaners and @cheetah efforts would be useless, so you could say goodbye to them.

The appropriate reaction to comments one does not like is downvoting them.

A better solution to "the problem" is user opt-in mute lists that are community maintained. A community should be able to publish a list of accounts they mute. A user can opt-in to using this list, or the set union of multiple lists they subscribe to.
If one has ever used adblocking, it would function like this -- lists one subscribes to to enjoy a curated experience.

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So, in other words, dig themselves an even bigger hole by muting their accuser? Warn them that if they mute your bots, they'll get in even more trouble.

You guys don't have enough SP to deal with the levels of mega-spam this feature is intended to address.

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The appropriate reaction to comments one does not like is downvoting them ...

... Depending on how 'big' their author is, right?

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yes exactly.
You will really think as "normal" (small) user if you downvote a whale … in every case if you have brain.

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I would hope they would allow anti-abuse accounts to come through no matter what.

Posted using Partiko Android

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yes I think it will be necessary to do this

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Maybe that would be an option, but everybody can create an account and call it "antiabuse" or whatever. There should be a consensus about, which accounts were accepted by the community for having special rights. Also the actions of these 'special' accounts should still be controllable by the STEEM community.

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What about a whitelist for specific accounts? Opt-in lists are flexible but it would be a big effort to maintain reasonable lists across the 1000's of blogs. And frontends still have the challenge of selecting which one(s) should be default -- since the default view (say, for a non-logged-in user) should not highlight toxic comments to a reasonable extent.

In addition to a long tail, it seems like some users have a tendency to harass specific authors. It may only be an issue on certain blogs and not globally. Giving authors some power to moderate their blog greatly distributes the responsibility.

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(Edited)

the default view (say, for a non-logged-in user) should not highlight toxic comments to a reasonable extent

Would seem to be addressed by:

The appropriate reaction to comments one does not like is downvoting them.

Given that consensus downvoted comments are hidden or at least end up at the bottom of the stream.

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Downvoting to hide comments only works if you are a relatively high SP user. Also, reward disagreement and content visibility are separate concerns which are bundled in the current system.

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(Edited)

It works even if you have low SP, if others agree with you and concur with your downvote by also downvoting. We see that in practice quite a bit when it is clear that content is abusive. Maybe we'll see even more of it after HF21.

I believe you are sightly misunderstanding my point re. reward disagreement and downvotes. I'm not suggesting that the issue here is reward disagreement on the comment itself, but on the post, and the comments are a way to discuss it. If the poster has unilateral control (including ability to suppress opposing views) over the comments, then it obstructs the ability of everyone to assess reward-worthiness. This is precisely the issue with @cheetah and @steemcleaners but I don't think it stops there; any critical opinions are potentially important and allowing the poster to unilaterally hide them is dangerous.

The suggestion to downvote the comments is purely for visibility, but done in a way that requires stakeholder consensus for the comment to be hidden and stay hidden. IMO this is the most sensible approach when comments, particularly critical ones, may weigh on stakeholders' assessment of the post.

I suppose it is true that the two concerns are currently bundled, and they could conceivably be unbundled (allowing stakeholders to vote separately on visibility and rewards) but that would certainly make things a lot more complicated and probably confusing. As things stand now when you downvote content that isn't being rewarded, or minimally so, that is implicitly for visibility, and upvotes on currently-hidden comment is also mostly for visibility (to vote in favor of restoring it).

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If it's plain to see who was muted, and if "Reveal all" was a sticky setting, isn't this a trivial change for anyone concerned about hidden opinions?

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(Edited)

There is a difference between one person being concerned about hidden opinions and the systemic effect of posters being able to unilaterally hide opinions from most of the readers. Defaults are powerful and there is a good chance that if the default is not showing, the most people won't ever see. That has a systemic effect on the nature of consensus, and not just an effect on individuals.

That being said, of course, these options are on a continuum. It is clearly better to have an easy place to click to see hidden comments than to have to go and dig through a chain explorer, try to find criticism in different posts altogether, or use some alternate interface. I'm still uncomfortable with the unilateral nature of it. A blog that participates in a shared reward pool is not the same as a personally-owned blog that is standalone, and I'm not sure that the same model of unilateral control by the blogger over conversations should carry over.

BTW since you brought up the issue of downvoting for reward and downvoting for visiblity being bundled, why are you proposing to bundle muting? I don't think it really makes a lot of sense. What I don't want to see is distinct from what I might want to hide from readers of my blog. Bundling them would seem to degrade the value of both. I might decline to mute someone I would prefer to mute because I have no intent to hide their comments from others, or I might decline to mute for hiding because I personally want to see it even if I think it detracts from my blog if displayed there. These are really quite distinct.

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I've taken a look at how other platforms handle muting and blocks/mutes are generally just applied to your own posts (well, also prevents mentions/DMs). I can block someone on Twitter and they can't respond to me but I can still see their comments elsewhere (as well as view their feed). This also happens to be more efficient for the backend. For the sake of simplicity and efficiency, my preference would be for a user's mutes to be applied only to the discussion threads a user starts, and no longer across the site. This gives the author more control over what kind of discussion they want to highlight, at the cost of having to see comments by the same user on other parts of the site. IMO it would be a net gain.

As for using comments to discuss reward disagreement, it's convenient but not a guaranteed ability. There's a disable_comments option in comment_options which doesn't allow anyone to comment. I don't agree this was a good idea, but it's one way ability to comment on a specific thread is already not a guarantee.

It's hard to have any control over basic ordering in your own discussions as a normal-staked user. You can try to flag junk but there are a lot of users who can override your preferences by force, and this is often done not to bring light to valid criticisms, but rather to "mess" with the author.

On this continuum is also the option to whitelist certain accounts, like community-supported bots fighting plagiarism. Listing the muted comment authors in order of highest SP to lowest would be an interesting way to display the most interesting mutes first. Users would see patterns and if they were engaged in the site long enough I'm sure they would explore the muted side of discussions.

A large proportion of users come to the site just one time. Regardless, the impression anyone gets from the discussion may determine if they see any value in engaging further. An unordered mix of spam and harassment among the discussion may likely increase the echo chamber effect. It's just not welcoming.

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(Edited)

Twitter has both mute and block, they are separate functions. As well as 'report' which really should drive home the inherent differences in a centralized vs. decentralized system.

As far as disable_comments, I'd be in favor of removing that altogether (the easiest approach, and seems quite reasonable to me since no one uses it) or disallowing it unless rewards are disabled.

It's hard to have any control over basic ordering in your own discussions as a normal-staked user

Again, you seem stuck on the idea of unilateral control (over ordering here), vs. voting by the community, of which you as the author are still only a part, even if you did create the post at the top of the tree. My answer to that would be if you want unilateral control, don't do it on a blockchain with a global community-based rewarding scheme.

Of course, steemit.com is a centralized web site and can do whatever it wants. I hope this doesn't get implemented in the form described on the centralized web site which happens to be the most used window to the Steem blockchain though.

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Yes, the approach discussed here does give the author a stronger voice, but calling it unilateral is extreme. Comment rendering is influenced by a variety of signals. The inspiration for the OP was to explore if existing mute data/UI could be modified to achieve a net benefit in a very simple way (immediately).

What does your ideal “main window of Steem” look like? Does it cater to prospective users by showing the best of our community? To creators by providing an engaging and productive experience? How are posts and comments ordered? How is spam and abuse addressed?

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(Edited)

Spam is addressed primarily at the blockchain level. Without question it has vastly improved since RCs and is hardly a huge problem at this point. I used to get dozens of spam comments on my posts (either my rare personal posts or burnpost), now I get a small handful. Even those often get downvoted (and hidden by UI) by others or by anti-spam efforts like mack-bot before I even see them. I think my experience is typical.

As far as abusive (in the sense of harassment), I think muting by the reader and potentially by the reader subscribing the curated mute lists is a sufficient remedy.

I don't think posters need or should have a much of a special right to curate/block/hide replies their own posts on a fundamentally shared platform. To the extent they're able to do this it should be less than absolute (and subject to community disagreement), for example by conveying some moderate bonus virtual SP to their downvotes.

Communities could change this dynamic, especially to the extent they shift to rewarding their own community-specific tokens and not global inflation. That becomes more of a "my house, my rules" situation and communities could set all sorts of rules on this (of course, more richness in this regard would be significantly harder to implement).

Spam has never been less of a problem on Steem than now, and with free downvotes upcoming, we may see that abusive (in the sense of harassment) may meet with a similar fate. At a minimum I would wait to see how free downvotes affect things before assessing anything.

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Taking a deeper dive, I agree that the spam situation is not bad, aside from a few concentrated pockets. I do wonder if part of it is decreased usage. Free downvotes will certainly help, especially if there are crowd-sourced and crowd-driven downvote programs. As far as I can tell, efforts to neutralize spam/blatant abuse are led by a small number of people.

It would be great if simply sorting comment threads by pending payout would produce the most useful result. But in practice, (a) many decent comments get no votes, (b) a few low-value comments get some votes, and (c) some insightful comments are downvoted far below 0.

Increased curation rewards (and interest in the platform) could lead to more intelligent automated voting which would help smooth out the difference between (a) and (b). There's a history of trying to solve issues with more complexity, where a simpler solution would suffice.. at scale.

Curated mute-lists could be part of a solution, though I'd imagine UIs picking a default mute-list for guests would be a further source of contention.

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(Edited)

As far as I can tell, efforts to neutralize spam/blatant abuse are led by a small number of people.

They may be (though some of this is probably the larger efforts being more visible) but by far the biggest improvement was simply the switch to RC which cut spam by some very significant percentage overnight (my guess would be 80%-ish).

This could be an example of solving a problem with an arguably more complex system, but one which was well thought out and had broad application (unlike many of the tweaks which were more reactive and impulsively made in the past, but had the effect of layering on unstructured complexity in a more harmful way).

Anyway, I do think we should assess the effects of HF21 which at this point we can only make rough estimates ranging from very limited to profound across the platform.

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I disagree. Plagiarists, identity thieves or other fraudsters should not be a excuse to take away the right of regular users to mute and hide unwantes comments. Its time to stop letting those very few people hold everyone else hostage.

Downvotes are still visible and can easily be checked.

Posted using Partiko Android

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I think the case could be made that 'the right of regular users to mute and hide unwantes comments' should only apply on rewards-declined content. Otherwise, the rewards are coming from a shared rewards pool and the user doesn't have sole ownership over it.

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(Edited)

'the right of regular users to mute and hide unwantes comments' should only apply on rewards-declined content. Otherwise, the rewards are coming from a shared rewards pool and the user doesn't have sole ownership over it.

Id argue that the reward pool has nothing to do with the content ownership. The reward pool does not enter into the intellectual or creative property of the content in any way.

This is a frontend issue in my mind and thus not subject to any inherent mechanic or attribute Steem has as a blockchain since the steem blockchain cannot and never will be able to deal with such specific questions of content property or human interaction.
This is the next layer where community consensus and application ownership are being discussed.
As Steemit.inc says in the post, its their call what to implement, if someone else wants to create a frontend with their own rules they can....

All that being said, i support this change.
Do i think its marginal? YES.
Do i think there are other far more important things to think about?
YES.
Do i think the Steem community is very small and the loudest members of the community fall into one extremely narrow political worldview and that it would be extremely hard to get a objective, unbiased, thought out response from them that isnt subject to the echo chamber, aggressive mentality that stems from the disdain of the mainstream social media equivalents?
Absolutely YES.

But as the question stands alone. It depends how you do it. If you do it right and watch for all the "leaks", this is a superior option to the one we have now and i support it.

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(Edited)

the reward pool does not enter into the intellectual or creative property of the content in any way.

Yes of course that is true. Property of the content itself is a separate matter to rewarding it out of the common reward pool. Being able to reply (and not being blocked by the poster) as to why content may be more or less worthy of rewards is an important process. The points about @cheetah and @steemcleaners are a subset of this but any stakeholder may have valuable information about why the post may not be worthy of rewards, and letting the poster unilaterally hide that seems problematic.

Posters can always downvote comments they don't like but then it becomes a community decision (by others voting as well) whether those are hidden, which seems right to me when those comments are discussing the posts value or lack thereof for reward purposes.

As Steemit.inc says in the post, its their call what to implement, if someone else wants to create a frontend with their own rules they can....

Certainly true. I'm giving my view on what seems best for the integrity of the reward pool and avoiding abuses, which is something they very much care about, as evidenced by both quoting of @anyx's comments in their follow-on post as well as their work on EIP in HF21.

If we are going to move away from a community reward pool as some have suggested, then it becomes less of an issue and the discussion threads can reasonably start to be viewed as the private domain of the blogger to filter and moderate as they see fit. But until and unless that happens (which isn't the case now or in the imminent HF21) I don't believe that should be the case.

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(Edited)

Being able to reply (and not being blocked by the poster) as to why content may be more or less worthy of rewards is an important process.

Sure. I agree, at the blockchain level. But we are here discussing an option that is absolutely and undeniably available to Steemit.inc to do with as they wish. Im saying that them extending that choice to the creators in the community is a great addition that people should applaud
Giving a part of the power Steemit.inc has over Steemit to the content creator is a positive thing. This is a matter of social media governance that would be extended to the creator.
Why do we want Steemit.inc to father us? Here they are offering us power and most of the people here.. i think 100 out of 120 are saying:

No we do not want that power, we dont want that freedom!

That is supremely confusing to me.

My thought process is very simple:
You are willing to give us more power on your platform??? I will take it!
Why in the world would i say: No! We shouldnt have this choice! Only Steemit.inc should!

The points about @cheetah and @steemcleaners are a subset of this but any stakeholder may have valuable information about why the post may not be worthy of rewards, and letting the poster unilaterally hide that seems problematic.

I just see that as a marginal thing compared to the offered. There are a huge number of ways to ensure abuse would be countered. The cheetah comment is really a minuscule thing and i know for a fact that steemcleaners are doing a poor and calculative job of fighting abuse. I mean @anyx will probably admit that openly if you ask him.

Downvotes could be made more visibile like on Steempeak, blog posts can always be made about the abuse, even abuse fighters blacklists could be used to take away features like this one from blacklisted creators which would give SFR, Steemcleaners more legitimacy and make them a bigger factor on the platform by giving them power over front end features. That is a big deal.

This would imo benefit everyone expect the harassers and trolls.

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(Edited)

But we are here discussing an option that is absolutely and undeniably available to Steemit.inc to do with as they wish

Yes and for the second and last time I'm giving my opinion on whether and under what conditions it is beneficial to the platform to do that.

If they didn't want our opinions they wouldn't even be making these posts, they would just deploy whatever features they want and that would be that.

You are willing to give us more power on your platform??? I will take it!

This is exactly the sort of mindset that results in people self-voting and vote-selling to the detriment of any value the platform might have in terms of content discovery or incentivized growth. It is a myopic view that puts ones own short term interests ahead of the success of Steem. The end result is you're able to take advantage of the freedom of all these great options made available to you but it won't matter because Steem will continue circling the drain until it eventually enters it.

I'm more interested in looking at the systemic effects and whether they are overall good or bad for the platform, and I don't think this is unconditionally good. Apparently a lot of other people don't either.

Some features somewhat like this can be usefully offered without doing more harm than good but the reality is more nuanced than just "give maximum power to content creators". There has to be a balance.

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!dramatoken

Thanks for being on this side, the wannabe royalty here is off their chain, imo.

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Concur.

Furthermore, this option can create an opportunity for a spammer to conceal their activity intentionally.

All they need to do is piss someone off enough to mute them and then it's open season in their comment section.

Additional, we want the lay users reporting up abuse they notice and this feature will reduce that likelihood.

Imo the consequences outweigh the benefit.

Posted using Partiko Android

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(Edited)

Yeah don't block the truth! Then the scammers can block the scammed people off their posts - not smart man! LOL Maybe 4 the circle jerkers & communities, but not for steemit??

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Greetings, @anthonyadavisii! This comment is part of the SteemFlagRewards Counterflag Healing program. You are set to receive 100% beneficiary rewards on this comment. If you would like to support this initiative, please consider a delegation to @neutralizer, @randohealer, or the @steemflagrewards main account. Thank you for flagging abuse!

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Not really Anthony.

It can be set up so scammers cant hide their activities.
You can introduce the community blacklist for scammers that forbids them to use this option.
Since Steemit.inc has delegated a million steem to @steemcleaners. You could basically dismiss this feature to any steemcleaners downvoted authors.
Actually implement the abuse response system into the steemit frontend and give abuse fighters legitimacy and power to remove features.

This change would be empowering to everyone. It just depends on how you do it.

Id keep downvotes still visible. And downvotes are really what matters.
You wouldnt be able to hide abuse.. Not really.

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"The appropriate reaction to comments one does not like is downvoting them."

If you are an whale maybe yes, but if you are an small user and have to fear, that the whale whome you downvote will react and downvote you and maybe "destroy" your account (means f.e. bring your reputation under 0) you better don't downvote.

This is the question here, that accounts who have enough Steempower can do what they want and only the small user are affected.

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(Edited)

Anthony is just afraid like the rest of the bad guys that have shame and need to hide all their haters and truth seekers! lol!

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No. Imho anyone should decide whom to mute.

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YES.

And I can only say yes as of recent. Some trolls just never stop. That alone makes me want a definite mute feature.

I have only muted 2 or 3 people ever. I know that my followers would love for those 2-3 people to not be shown on my blog leaving nasty comments they benefit nobody.

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No. I think it would be misused. People who plagiarise or otherwise abuse Steem would hide comments from those calling them out. That said, I can see valid uses for it, but it's better to not censor.

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NO. That is to preserve the helpful efforts by real persons revealing scams and those by @steemcleaners, @cheetah, and other reporting bots. Otherwise, the author will be able to mute such bots and even real persons to get away with their scams.

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That is a good point, I hope they would allow these reporting bots designated as anti-abuse through regardless of muting the average user.

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YES - BUT! Done differently, for example you may want to mute a specific user from your view in general but you may not necessarily want to mute them from the view of others. There are also cases where you may want to hide only certain comments from a certain user that are not suitable, so maybe a hide/unide comment button would be best. However this also risks stuff being taken out of context. Perhaps the whole concept is a bit risky for now, it works more for forums where discussions should be on topic, but could be abused and create a biased view in a blog format. There will be no more disagreements for fear of having your views hidden for example.

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(Edited)

As suggested by anyx, maybe a global list managed by the Steemcleaners would be a safer start to the experiment, bloggers can decide to opt-in to that list to have those offenders hidden on their blogs. The list can be on github and the community can contribute names for review.

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I can see why you would want to implement such a tool.
Very 1984

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(Edited)

Yes and No.

Yes because I'm only muting them so that their comments don't show in my blog, but they're free to create their own blog. One particular scenario that come to mind are posts made by themarkymark are being spammed by comments.

No. Because of the comment made by anyx.

I guess this requires more thought.

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NO

Users should be able to decide who they want to see, not what other users ought to see.

Silencing critics isn’t something that should be entertained on a “censorship-resistant” and “decentralized” platform. It’s only one of two selling points you actually have for social media users in the first place.

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(Edited)

A big YES.

Muting comments gives the creator power. It adds choice. This change would allow creators more ownership over their content and more power over their content.

This is a complete must that elliminates stupidity ww have been seeing with comment spam these last months.

This is a huge improvement and has nothing to do with censorship. It has to do with content ownership and creator empowerment.

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This change would allow creators more ownership over their content and more power over their content.

Their content is not affected by comments. Their ownership of their content is not changed by commentary.

This is a complete must that elliminates stupidity ww have been seeing with comment spam these last months.

There's always a noble reason for introducing these features. But that's not how they're typically applied. There's no reason why one user ought to render another user invisible to me if I have not muted them. You talk about choice, but you're denying me my choice to see that user's comments.

It has to do with content ownership and creator empowerment.

Any creator can mute someone they don't want to see. You're OK with extending that into a classic example of silencing critics...shutting down debate...by making critical commentary invisible to other users with the click of a button. At the very least, I should have the option to view what the blog "owner" doesn't want me to see. I can make my own choices about whether or not that commentary is valuable or if the user is a problem.

These are public forums. You don't "own" public discourse. If you want private conversations and a safe space to communicate, there are plenty of options for that. When you start shutting down critical voices - or merely creating the ability to do so - you start venturing into censorship territory, which is the antithesis of what Steem claims to be. Don't blame "spamming" for the desire to control what others are able to view. Mute them, but give other users of the platform the option to see what they want to see on that platform.

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(Edited)

Their content is not affected by comments. Their ownership of their content is not changed by commentary.

It absolutely and undeniably is. Its not only affected by examples like the spam FTG did for months but it also affected by trolling comments in the lesser degree then the FTG example. Losing control over the comment section of your own content is a major ownership issue.

There's no reason why one user ought to render another user invisible to me if I have not muted them. You talk about choice, but you're denying me my choice to see that user's comments.

If you want that choice go read another persons article. Muting of comments by the original poster is a statement in itself by the author. "This, i will not accept".
That is an absolute power statement by the content creator signifying their ownership of their content.

"This is my house and there are certain things i will allow/not allow in my house."
By adopting this you give the creator this power.
Muting comments is the ultimate content creator empowerment tool.

You're OK with extending that into a classic example of silencing critics...shutting down debate.

This is a misleading statement. The debate is always open. You are free to post to your blog anything you want, whenever you want, in response to whatever you want. That is the right a frontend should extend to anyone.
A critic, a troll, a spammer...

By giving content creators this option you give them choice and as i said their choice is their statement. Its their expression of who they are beyond their words.

If you want private conversations and a safe space to communicate, there are plenty of options for that.

If someone wants a safe space to communicate they should have that. That should be their own content on their own blog page. Im an absolute supporter of moderation because it gives content owners power.
If they want to silence critics they should be able to. Critics have plenty of options to share their criticism.
Why are you so opposed to this but i would assume you do not mind flags and their power to silence critics by graying out their content on their own small part of the platform.

We give stake holders power to silence or reduce visibility of content they dont want others to see but moderation of comments by the content creator on their own content is a big no to everyone?

I call absolute rubbish on that. I call complete lack of fairness.
@andrarchy.

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Nobody is silenced or made completely invisible to other users by a downvote. Users have the option to see the downvoted comments. So that’s not at all a valid comparison.

To the rest of your arguments...

If you want absolute control over public discourse on “your” blog, then run your own website. Steem is not a private blog site. It’s a very public and very transparent social platform, by design. You want something that this was not designed to be and you want to force your viewing decisions on other users, and then you want to call it “user choice.”

That’s laughable and it’s not how “censorship-resistance” works.

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If you want absolute control over public discourse on “your” blog, then run your own website. Steem is not a private blog site.

The guys that run this website just asked the question if we want them to expand on the Mute feature.
You do know Steem does not equal Steemit. I know you do.
Ill take this as your way of capitulating to the arguments. Seeing you as being a big opponent to this change and a witness i think this should help @andrarchy make a right call.

Let me quote the first sentence of this post.

Hello Steemians, we want to hear your thoughts on whether we should expand the “Mute” feature on steemit.com.

Ill see you around. Nice talk.

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(Edited)

Hello Steemians, we want to hear your thoughts on whether we should expand the “Mute” feature on steemit.com.

Oh, I see what the problem is. You didn’t read anything past the first half of that sentence. Here’s the rest of it:

...(specifically “Condenser” the open source software that powers steemit.com and a number of other sites) to include hiding comments on a blog from visitors to that blog if the author has Muted the commenter.

This feature would be changed on the layer that powers Steem interfaces, generally.

You do know Steem does not equal Steemit.

Yes, I do. You do know that Condenser does not equal Steemit.com, right? Now you do.

What you’re apparently not grasping here is that Steem users do not “own” anything other than what’s in their Steem wallet (provided they have the keys) and the content that they create and publish. They own no part of an interface. They own no part of Condenser. They do not own a comment section where other users publish their own content in the form of replies/commentary. They do not own the choices of other users.

If you want “ownership” over your content, who you want to see your content, who you want to comment on your content, and who you want to allow to see who is commenting on your content, then you need to own the domain and website where you publish and interact. Otherwise, you are at the mercy of the actual site owner where you publish your content.

So when you and STINC mention “ownership,” I have no idea what you’re talking about and it seems that the concept actually escapes you guys. Nobody is challenging or affecting the ownership of what you publish. If you’re afraid to publish something because of what someone might say, then that’s a problem with you, not me. Mute them. Then you won’t have to read what they’ve said. If I don’t like what they say, I can mute them too. Simple as that.

Harassment and other serious problems can be adequately handled by website ToS.

You also seem to have missed these parts of the post...

But this question isn’t always straightforward, especially at the user interface level. It can also conflict with some people’s views on censorship.

But what do you think? This is a feature that is intended to improve the user experience on steemit.com, so if you don’t think it will do that, be sure to vote “NO” in the comment section below.

After "YES" or "NO" you should feel free to share any additional thoughts you might have on the topic.

They asked for commentary about a yes or no vote. I provided some. It’s kind of pointless to try to argue it. I offered my opinion, you offered yours. They probably won’t read and don’t actually care about either one anyway.

And finally - they apparently want this to be extended to entire communities.

A user’s blog (and in the future their Community) should be a place where they feel safe to speak their mind.

So, we’re going to allow one user to effectively silence someone in an entire community just because one user muted them for any reason they choose? If I “owned” the Politics community, I could mute every user with a different viewpoint and effectively censor all dissent? Please tell me how this is a great selling point for an improved user experience on a “censorship-resistant” platform. I’m dying to know how multiple petty tyrants are so much different from one proper tyrant in practice.

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One thing that will never change is that any information posted to the Steem blockchain will be open and accessible to anyone. This feature change we are suggesting would have no impact on that whatsoever. All comments will always remain on-chain, and any developer is always free to provide an interface that displays that information.

Just give it a rest...

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lel...ok

Ill take this as your way of capitulating to the arguments.

:)

Bye!

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No, lol. Thats a quote from the post you forgot to read.
There is nothing to discuss when the counter to your arguments is right there in front of your nose.
Steemit.inc even says that youre free to build any mute feature you want.

All these changes are on the front end side. Just like the graying out comments, just like the trending page algo...
All of it. And there the discussion ends man.

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(Edited)

Yes, I’m aware of where the quote is from. Same place my quotes were from.

I get it. You don’t like my opinion. You’ll be one of those guys that wants to mute everyone who disagrees with you. It’s cool. That’s how you feel. Run with it.

And my discussion ends when I say it ends, not you. Jesus...you try to be a controlling little twat, don’t you? I think maybe decentralized, “censorship-resistant” platforms may not be for you.

amirite?

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Hmm. Feisty little pissant, arent you? 😂
Haha. I bet youre the type of person that would keep on going, no matter how wrong you might be, trying to make the guy quit, but get the last word in.

Compensating for something?

I mean ffs look at what youre writing.

Its not your opinion of YES/NO that i have an issue with. Its your arguments that are plain wrong. Even still you try to missrepresent this as a Steem question and not a frontend one.

Now your ego is hurt so you devolved into personal attacks and name calling.

How bout i say it again.

This discussion is over.
Have a plate of fries. Youve been served.
(Doesnt that just get your ego firing)
😂😂😂

Jeez.. The type of people you run into here.

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"content creators should have control over their content, and any content that is about it or under it".

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It would require a small amount of extra coding, but you could implement this as follows:

  1. a user setting for posters that specifies whether the user wants this muting to potentially take place on his posts.
  2. a user setting for readers that specifies whether the reader wants to honor this mute setting on posts he reads.

Then default the user setting to honoring the mute setting on posts he reads (and probably default the poster setting to do the muting on his posts).

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(Edited)

That's an excellent Idea. but the first should not be there. a user shouldn't have setting for posters that specifies whether the user wants this muting to potentially take place on his posts. It should be readers or curators decide are the comments are abusive or spamming. the second point is excellent and even it can modified as

give muting option to readers not content creators.

But still people create bots to mute the comments on their posts :(

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No, it seems to be a pointless feature. There are other front ends that have this feature already.

However if you were able to put in a function for users to send #nomute urls (for the cleaners to proove, etc.), similar to ?=nomute or whatever it would be alright, I suppose

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NO

I'm pretty mixed on this but I think no is the appropriate answer. While this would prevent a lot of trolls it will prevent other engagement too and silence opinions they disagree with pushing into censorship territory. It will also prevent the ability to warn users of scams, abuse, and other things the author may not want to be shown.

I really do appreciate making this a poll rather than just announcing it is happening provided it isn't just done anyway.

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Lol, what, do they have a rep for not listening, or something?

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LOL he cares about silencing opinions now> Good Grief!

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(Edited)

Why cause then maybe we won't ever talk again! I'd miss you too! Funny now you don't like silencing, when it might be you. I already got 98% silenced and it don't hurt. Buck up cowboy! lol! jk!???

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(Edited)

We're done!Screen Shot 2019-07-25 at 7.38.07 PM.png

It's over! I caught u cheating on us with Anthony-whatevas again! Back to the dog house 4 ya! Bye!

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No

This is for the other front ends to do not steemit.

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(Edited)

No,

While I understand the importance of getting rid of spam, harassment, ... the feature will for sure be used to mute specific users simply because their opinions on a specific subject do not conform to the author's ideas.

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NO

This is no different than shadow-banning on Twitter and Facebook, and has led to a whole host of issues. Not the least of which is creating echo-chambers where dissent is impossible.

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No, each user should decide only for what they see.

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And one feature would be to give the USER the ability to say they want to trust the mutes of the author. SteemPeak has done that.

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And I'm assuming that it defaults to trusting the mutes of the author (especially for users who are not logged in) @jarvie?

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Posted a picture and more info below in a post. But yeah default is on and everyone seems to be A OK with it because everyone gets to decide for themselves.

I actually love having it turned on. But i'm totally willing to click to see if the author muted someone... it's not like it's forever forgotten and gone. For the most part I consume content of the people I follow and I follow people for a reason and I trust them to clean their place up. But if i'm snooping around in new places i may click to see the hidden comments.

Anyway yeah it's been a really widely accepted feature with no issues because of the balance and the final decision is always on the end user.

Actually you start to realize just how rarely the mute function is presently being used (at least where I usually lurk)

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(Edited)

NO... Kinda

The end user / the consumer should be in charge of their decision.
Happy if you want to copy this system from https://steempeak.com
... I'm sure @asgarth can help you out.
It seems to have solved most issues people were having and users seem to be completely positive about it to date.

image.png

As you can see you could set your condensor to default use the mute settings of the author.
BUT, there's an important of this solution... when you're on a post there's always the ability for the user to make a spot decision to see those "muted" / hidden comments if you really want to.

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You confuse me, I thought that is exactly what this post says. If you the user/consumer/blogowner mute someone then their comments won't show! Flag for being confusing. Why would it be up to the offender that leaves the bad comments/spam?

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It's about giving the user the option... the issue is forcing a feature onto people with no way around it.

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(Edited)

Thanks, I actually agree and will unflag u now! I don't like censorship. I have already been censored, does not feel good!

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No, We must not take the step into censorship ever.

What I really want is that when someone give a flag should leave a comment saying why he did it, stupid bots always ruining our network.

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Those bots are the network. This is some guys whose name ends with Stein's cash cow. Not even kidding you.

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(Edited)

bots always ruining our network.

Most of the comments a newbie will see are the "you won x award" and such. There's no way to stop them and they comment on every single post you make. So, yeah... a way to mute them would be useful.

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No.

I’d rather leave it up to those who visit my blog and I agree with @anyx that the system could be abused to hide reasonable critiques and policing of bad content.

Posted using Partiko iOS

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So you going to decide on 50 opinions of random people who accidentally stumbled on this post and participate in the pool?

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Odds are, they already decided. This is just for show.

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You're right. We saw this same trick with the downvote button.

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NO. Enhancing the mute feature is something trivial, alouds censorship and make steemit one step closer to centraliced platform. 👎

We want and we need Steemit's ads on the web, more collaborations and of course, SMT!!! 👍

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NO.
In general I don't agree with censoring comments on your own Blog, because the authors content is now open in the public for discussion and controversial opinions should be always visible.
But I would like to see a feature where you can mute somebody else comments, but not for free!
This service should cost you some Steem, if you really consider to mute somebody else on your Blog Post. To be specific I would like to see that Steem gets "burned" for the ability to mute, and the more users you "mute" on your Blog the more you have to pay!
This would prevent that somebody "mutes" everyone that disagree on his posts, because it costs him Steem. And by doing so he would burn Steem and the whole community profits.
I really would like to see some "sinks" as @aggroed always says to be implemented in your frontend Steemit.com. And this Service "to mute comments" could be your first of many "sinks" for Steem :-)

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Nah. The content creator should have power over their own content.
Muting comments is a statement made by the creator and it should be their right. Its up tonyou to take it as you wish.

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Would you consider to pay for this service - burn Steem for muting comments?
I think if this feature is for free than censoring comments is going to be a problem in the long run.

Posted using Partiko Android

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This is a great idea, why? Well what they want to accomplish is to give "people" (persons) like Nike, Coke and such more incentive to come on here, as well for many professionals, incentives that are very lackluster as it is, and this would accommodate them as no way in hell will Nike deal with someone like me challenging them over their Vietnam slave plantations under any posts (or comments), same with Coke and their "product", but if they could effectively censor me, it will be fine methinks, they might even be glad to pay for the returns that the exposure will give them. Think about it, why aren't almost ANY professionals coming here, other than their shit stinking 8 ways from Sunday and plenty of degenerates who derive joy from pointing it out..

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Their own content, which doesn't mean anyone else's content, like comments. If I go to a website and use their comment section, irrelevant of what their "tosc are, that is my content, not theirs, ever. The content belongs to the author, to you, that doesn't extend to comments. By your own logic, if I mute the author of the post I comment under I too should have the option to hide their responses to my comments.

Nah. The content creator should have power over their own content.

Content creator mah balls. Over their own content, lmao. Logic, reasoning, evades you, that's what I take your nonsense as.

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😂

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The irony is that you currently have me muted but you clearly don't care for that option, but if this was implemented, my comment would be completely invisible regardless that you don't even use steemit yet here you are offering your suggestions for them, but the most important thing though is your "response", which beautifully illustrates exactly the concern that so many people in this post warned against: silencing disagreement. You think you can fake laugh as if there is anything to ridicule about what I said, but there isn't, and it reinforces how elusive simple logic/reasoning is with you, when you could have been a decent fellow and responded in kind, afforded me the same courtesy I did you, but then that would mean actually considering what I said and the validity of my conclusion and i don't expect that an obvious idiot, someone clearly so stupid that they said "Nah(yeah, so cool and nonchalant). The content creator should have power over their own content." when they weren't talking at all about the said creator's content, but other people's content to act other than an idiot who "laughs" at reason and critical thinking, O sweet beautiful irony, forever an inch out of the hypocrite's mental capacity.

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You really need to get some help man. The excessive aggression coming off of you signals a mental instability.
I do use Steemit except when on my phone and youre not muted though i should mute you.

See the majority of people dont mute opinions or dissagrements in arguments.
They mute people like you that are hostile, that throw around insults and ad hominems.

You are the exact reason why this SHOULD be implemented because you not only defile the comment section of the authors post with your conflict seeking attitude and shameless behavior but you act as a detterant to civil discussion hijacking the comment section and allienating civil individuals that want no part of it.
Mutinf comments on someones post gives the content creator the power to stop this kind of behavior and facilitate the kind of discussion they want on their content.

Their choice to do so is their statement of what they want to see disscused on their post.

If you can create a front end that does that, and steemit.inc is obviously considering this option, if you accept that a front end can control what is seen on their site, then why is it so hard to understand that extending that power beyond Steemit.inc to the community is a good thing?

Im for more power to the people and less to organizations.
Its a shame you want to restrict that and not see it happen.

@steemitblog.

Anyways. Get yourself checked out. This aggresion youre showing is not normal.

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Screenshot_20190729_105834.png

Sorry, clearly you're very confused and a certifiable mental midget. What the fuck were you laughing at again? That's what I thought you whack ass idiot. Lol

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Preaching about aggression lmao. That is rich you idiot.

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And now you get muted. 😂

Weak ass, bitch ass, ass ass.

Haha. Insults...

The last resort of insecure people with a crumbling position trying to appear confident.

Have a great day. 😘

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Or the go to repertoire of someone with zero tolerance for idiot shit and a joy to hurl insults while decisively rebutting the nonsense, to the point that even one emoji reckless attempt at shutting down the discussion only serves as a perfect platform to not only question the imbecilic ridicule but to further the discussion even more.

You're so dumb, you think you call lie about muting me on a publicly verifiable blockchain, or you are so stupid that instead of verifying that you indeed had muted me already, a mere trivially simple task, you would rather just go with your feelings or whatever you used to base your crap on. Lmao. Idiot, my new favorite word, I have to retire retard as my go to insult.

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The other really hilarious thing, you think that my comments defile the content, but as the overwhelmingly vast majority disagree with this idiot suggestion, they will surely agree that what someone says about something doesn't mean that it's true, correct or what everyone else thinks, unless they do, and then it's not "defilement" to anyone but the idiots who begged to be "defiled" by opening their idiot holes.

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😂😂😂

Just had to read this. Now youre on mute.

Posted using Partiko Android

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(Edited)

Lmao. As if I wasn't on mute already

Here's a clue you idiot :

Screenshot_20190729_111424.png

If I'm on mute "now" where's the publicly verifiable proof one would expect. Lmao, you're such an idiot you can probably JUST barely work a keyboard and you thought you would shut me up with ridicule in response to some sensible remarks, the consequences of which only peg you more and more as "that idiot who burned his girlfriend's face because he thought throwing gas on a camp fire was neat".

Literally what you remind me of, someone so imbecilic that I shudder to think the harm they leave in their idiot way.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=s6WZyUrATi4

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(Edited)

Lol this is funny right?

https://news.yahoo.com/man-accidentally-burned-wife-leaves-163000896.html

SMH.

O no you're defiling the comment section, it must be sanitized or no Sane. Person will do what people generally do in such a situation, or ignore the perceived troll and simply discuss about the merits of what they wanted to discuss anyway.

If you consider me such a degenerate scumbag it only proves that you're an idiot by engaging me, or extremely bored, or maybe you could (lmao) shut me up with your remarks on the other options there are (sanitize the internet lol right? Make the safe space all-encompassing (that means big enough to cover everything, in case your idiot self struggles).

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Dude's a tool, imo.
Thinks blowing stinc is a good thing.

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Steemit on this issue is of the retarded mind that people want other people to have the option to decide for them what they can and can't see, and this is probably because they, like this idiot, think that comments under a post by anyone other than the posts author say something about the post itself, that they can devalue or infringe on the post but the matter of fact is that this is a public place, people are posting on a public place, and commenting on a public place, they aren't owed any kind of reservations, no one can own the place, only what they bring to it.

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Lol, don't you know Stinc, et al, is steem royalty?
They decree how things are , and we like it.
Well, the morons that don't know better might like it, and maybe the cucks.
I don't like it, at all.

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Not true, the EIP isn't their decree, nor was linear their decree, and if they really think they are royalty they need a lesson in history as a lot of dethroned kings and queens caution against abusing their position, along with many more exiled or executed.

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It was announced and then witnesses were asked to support it.
We know the witnesses positions are contingent on keeping some of the et al happy.

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(Edited)

You're conveniently leaving out the precursor to the announcement, which was by and large the numerous stakeholders diligently addressing the issue of bidbots/content indifferent voting and putting forth the idea by debate and discussion alike in other people's minds so that it finally couldn't be ignored or dismissed.

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Yes.
It wasn't this one so much as it was the last one.
The thirty some months it took to give in to what had been on the table all along is what upsets me.

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(Edited)

Tell me something, is it an ad hominem simply because I made remarks about your capacities? Lol.

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(Edited)

"he's a retard, he threw gasoline on a camp fire"

That's an ad hominem correct?

What about this

"the content creator should have control over other people's content posted under their content" which is the clearly communicated idea that you undoubtedly tried to articulate but failed miserably, and is remarking on the irony/hypocrisy of that foolish idea, and how stupid it is, an ad hominem, or a valid case and point? Lmao.

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!dramatoken
Give 'em hell, baah!

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I give them my honest thoughts, I have no reason to pander to nonsense or beat around the bush about what I regard them as, what they do with it is entirely on them, and if they want to ridicule me I'll give them the same no holds bared attitude.

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Lol, most folks are blind to the contradictions you illuminate for them.
Their denial of the facts tells them to get angry to win.
Their cognitive dissonance bell goes ding, ding, ding.

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This is a cool idea

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NO

Because this is ultimately the wrongheaded approach to solving the problem.

I don't want a spammer to have the right to invade my personal space. But I also don't want to give the power to decide what I see to someone who has written the original post just because they've written the original post. I don't always read things written by people I agree with. I don't always read things written by people that other people agree with. I don't necessarily trust either party to make decisions about what I see for me.

Ideally, the default would be NO and I could decide individually, by account, whether I trust them to have muted discussion in their comments appropriately. Some people I trust to make that kind of decision. Some people I definitely don't trust to make that kind of decision.

Ultimately, the decision of who I trust and who I don't trust should never be up to the platform because it's the platform's job to execute my will as regards to what I want to see, not to execute somebody's will on what I want to see.

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(Edited)

NO!

I agree with this guy, we need to pick and choose which comments. We already got flags for that, that's what flags are for? Duh! STEEMIT could die off if they botch this one and start more censorship and blocking!! lol As an investor this rattles me some more!

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“NO” I believe that when we Mute another user their comments should remain visible to the visitors of our blog even if we have Muted them.

Why? well, it is supremely simple indeed. Because if we (or whoever else) are able to actually censor and prevent other people to read and follow the ongoing sequential developing of a heated thread debate...

Who the hell is gonna know then:

¿Where the "Naked Truth" really is? & ¿Which of the interlocutors along the discussion was right?

Don't mess up with these 'thangs' kids.

Let the free awareness flow as it is due!!

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(Edited)

YUP that is true, they may block out all the truth! Now I'm changing my mind. The circle jerks will just get worse! This is supposed to be an open blockchain right?

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This is supposed to be an open blockchain right?

Yeah! and we all around here are responsible 'adults' right? };)

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LOL!

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Nice, pretty sick art-graphics!

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Thanks mate!! :)

Btw, even when I wanted, I didn't upvote any of your comments, simply because even with my super filthy & rickety $0.01 at 100% of my almighty VP... it wouldn't be enough to bring up your comments at the light of the sun after those couple of automatized flags which always chase you everywhere..

I hope you are not so 'muted' ...yet. };)

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(Edited)

No worries, thanks for the keen observation. I'm already this muted, looks like they want to finish me off now once and for all. I am a threat to them for some reason, not sure why. This is my punishment because I must have been bad again letting out more STINC secrets as usual! lol 🤙🤙 I was just telling my mom how pretty soon I may be (from grey) to all white, and low and behold I log onto steemit and see that article about how it could all happen very soon- eerie!

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I was just telling my mom how pretty soon I may be (from grey) to all white

Nah! don't worry too much about this 'white cloaking attire' that these perseverant fuckers have been imposing you to dress so far.

This supposed 'invisibility' punishment is only working on steemit.com as I can see. On other front-ends your feedback simply shines even in the moonlight. And yeah, you should release out way more STINC secrets as usual to everyone taste it, chew it, swallow it & digest it. And to the one who'll feels their tongue burned, it is just because they are not used to eating chili. };)

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I absolutely agree with you @por500bolos

I wonder where did this idea came from in the first place.

Yours
Piotr

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NO

I am fearing misuse as explained by others despite it can have some good impacts.

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Here's my final response. Intuitively, I'd say YES.

In this case, ownership supercedes preference. Since we're talking about Steemit website, then this feature is owned by Steemit, Inc and should definitely go with what best benefits User Experience for Steemit users.

Please also consider simplicity. Complexity is one of the enemies in software dev and should be addressed aggressively. I believe this seems to be one of those times.

As owner of my blog/post (and in the future a community), I believe this feature needs to be introduced sometime.

(Optional) The visitor to an author's blog then can have an option (in his settings) whether to honor the author's mute settings.

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@steemitblog,
Yes, this is better. If we mute it's mute for everyone who is dealing with our blog posts. Yeah that's better!

Cheers~

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(Edited)

Maybe but what if the system gets abused by steemit. What they are trying to do here is mute me from every blog, that is what this whole post is about! lol They already muted me, an now that isn't good enough, they want moar! IMHO!

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Wait a minute, someone like me may then vanish from steemit, sounds like a scam. How are we going to get votes if no-one can see us anymore! Steemit might use the feature to block someone like me from every which way!

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(Edited)

What is wrong with it we mute them & they simply get lightened or greyed out? Isn't that what the whole SP and flag system is for? OMG going backwards STEEMIT again! Pansys!

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Congratulations @steemitblog! You have completed the following achievement on the Steem blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :

Your post was the most commented on one day

You can view your badges on your Steem Board and compare to others on the Steem Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

To support your work, I also upvoted your post!

Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness to get one more award and increased upvotes!
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NO

But we do need a path that will get the berniesanders group of accounts off the blockchain. The death threats alone are grounds enough to take such an action

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You should have seriously considered dpoll DAPP. Just got to https://dpoll.xyz and post this. Counting Yes/No would have worked very easily for everyone.

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YES
For the love of god YES please! I think some of the suggestions in the comments are good though, like letting the viewer decide whether they want to honor the preference of the author, but having the default be to respect their preference.

Improving user experience is NUMBER ONE priority, NOT censorship resistance, or protecting someone's right to troll, because let's be real, that's what it comes down to in reality.

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No - this feature would do more harm than good and only serve to make steemit the same as any other social media where people can create cosy echo chambers for themselves!

I would actually like more data instead of less so people can make uo their own minds with all the facts and not just people able to shape narratives!

If you don’t like what someone has to say you can ignore it yourself but that doesn’t mean they are wrong or don’t have valid points! What some might consider harassment others might consider common sense

Posted using Partiko iOS

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(Edited)

No

Why should we decide for others to see other comment? Then it’s no social network any more.

If you can’t take different opinions, then internet isn’t a place for you.

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(Edited)

NO, @anyx said it best : "Plagiarists, identity thieves, or other fraudsters will mute comments from anyone calling them out on their actions.
This means the @steemcleaners and @cheetah efforts would be useless, so you could say goodbye to them.

The appropriate reaction to comments one does not like is downvoting them."

Also why not dpoll ?

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why not dpoll

Probably because they don’t use Steem enough to realise it exists. That’s just the cynical me talking.

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YES , is a must need feature, there's too much bot spam every time someone is posting an article. "Your post won x award.", "You've been selected for x,y,zzz reward", "This post was promoted with..." and so on. I find that annoying and it doesn't add any value to the content.

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NO.

AS we are giving full ownership for the content for the creator and you should also full rights to readers and curators to share their opinions and comments. This is only leads to the silencing of the critics and reduction of the freedom of speech. Every comment should be visible to anyone to understand the other's perspective on the same content

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NO-For all the reasons @anyx listed.

If you are really all about letting the user control the info they see on their own page then why do I have to have a bunch of featured posts show up in my feed that I have absolutely no interest in from users I choose not to follow?

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(Edited)

A solution like the one implemented by SteemPeak seems the right one, giving any steemian the choice on how he or she sees or not the muted comments on a blog. By the avalanche of "NOs", seems like the setting should be by default set to not following the mute options of the blog author. Still wondering what should happen by default for visitors.

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(Edited)

Of 124 responses at this very moment "111" people said NO.

My response to your question is the same NO!

As for the 'opposite of no' there is currently '28' bozos among us! According to the results pulled from an F3 search. Give or take someone could have used the word twice, same with the 'N' of course.

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I've seen that @jarvie already answered this poll, but I'm going to write my 2 cents too. From my point of view the post author should have more control over his blog, but the reader must be able to choose if he wants to follow the author preferences or not. Also it should be always possible to view all the comments easily, without leaving the post itself.

This is how it works on https://steempeak.com. Not going to share a screenshot because I've seen that it's already in a comment :)

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NO

(but something else might work better)

I'd prefer to see something somewhat like the irredeemables list, but in a decentralized way. https://github.com/steemit/irredeemables

By that, I mean individuals could choose to use the mute lists of other users they trust. This could help improve the user experience here while keeping the decentralized nature of Steem social media and only allowing "censorship" via consensus and individual user choice.

Example:

Person A is sick of seeing so much crap on Steemit such as spammy comments, abusive comments, etc. They want a solution.

Person B, C, and D are trusted members of the community. Maybe they are witnesses. Maybe they are leaders within their social circle. Maybe they have a lot of real followers. Maybe they've done a good job of curating real relationships on Steemit, and they've created their own mute lists for improving the user experience here.

Person A trusts B, C, and D and in their settings, chooses to use these mute lists to improve their experience.

You could also display a list of the most used mute lists. Maybe Person B is trusted by the most number of people to create a good experience and not unnecessarily censor people. When a new user joins Steemit, they should be given a step-by-step walkthrough of how Steemit works which includes asking if they'd like to select one or more mute lists (while also explaining the censorship-resistant nature of blockchain social media and how nothing is actually "censored", just hidden from view).

Ideally, the results of these mute lists would only hide (not fully mute) comments, similar to what happens now with a downvoted comment. When they view the comment, it would show which list the poster was included on and who maintains that list with a simple option right there to remove that list from your selection of mute lists.

The "most used mute list" could have some Sybil attack issues, but that could be figured out over time as a community.

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NO.

We have the option to up- and downvote content we like and dislike respectively.

A mute option as discussed goes against the idea of free speech.

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NO

I have nothing to hide, I would like to see everything written about me and I like others to see it as well. You understand this way who is your enemy and who is your friend. You understand what all people think about you. Maybe there are who want to hide something, that's why they want this option. It's their problem, please leave it as it is, it's the blockchain after all, everything need to be seen. The funny thing that if you impliment this, it will be seen in the blockchain anyway. So, leave it as it is. I think it's better !

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NO

I have seen a lot of GOOD users posting comments under posts created by BAD users or abusers. It helped me to make my own decisions on who is who. I would like to keep that right. 🧐

Flag feature should be fixed instead.

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Yes, pero que se vea cuando el bloguero a silenciado a alguien.

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(Edited)

I don't believe that this is a question where you can only answer with yes or no.

In the end it's the question why you mute him - there are different reasons and because of this my suggestion would be, that if you mute somebody you can yourself decide if comments in your blog from this user will be visible for all.

Would this be a good solution ?

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Hello!

Are you asking this to me? I've proxied all development related decisions to my Witnesses. So shouldn't they need to vote on this? Or do they vote only for Steem related issues and not Steemit - related?

Actually, your handle is very confusing to me. You should have 2 different handles viz. steemitblog and steemblog to publish updates relevant to respective issues.

Here you're talking about front-end and SMT in the same post. This increases the confusion between Steem and Steemit.

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No.

Muting / posting rights and restrictions should be handled by the "communities" hardfork. Each community can then set its own rules for how to handle spam / comment advertising / abuse etc.

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You guys are motherfucking clueless morons. That's all I have to say.

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yeah, them even asking this question about muting really has me wondering if they even know the steem community and where they even got this idea.

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(Edited)

Well I got muted from steemit.com already so stfu! And I also happened to witness them mute some of bernie's comments too!

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NO, I think other in the comments have addressed why the answer should be no.

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