You will no longer be able to throw your Klout score around… did anyone really do that?
Read the whole story
Read the whole story
On a thread where half the people are saying "Klout? I don't remember it, but it sound horrible," and the other half are saying "Gee I heard about that when it launched, but I thought it already went under..." it's highly unlikely anyone remembers that pic you just added in the edit.Where else will I go when I want to bro down and crush code?
edit:
For fuck sake what the fuck is with the downvotes?
Do you people not know anything?!
Seriously, people..
http://jonathonhill.net/wp-content/uplo ... rodown.jpg
Klout, a service that tracks how much social media attention its users draw...
edit:
For fuck sake what the fuck is with the downvotes?
Do you people not know anything?!
As of now (10.14 UTC+2), you have one downvote.Where else will I go when I want to bro down and crush code?
edit:
For fuck sake what the fuck is with the downvotes?
Do you people not know anything?!
Seriously, people..
http://jonathonhill.net/wp-content/uplo ... rodown.jpg
Good riddance.
It still boggles my mind that there were people using it, and they got VC money at all.
As of now (10.14 UTC+2), you have one downvote.Where else will I go when I want to bro down and crush code?
edit:
For fuck sake what the fuck is with the downvotes?
Do you people not know anything?!
Seriously, people..
http://jonathonhill.net/wp-content/uplo ... rodown.jpg
One.
Of course, maybe your downvoters scrambled en masse to retract their vote after your edit...
Totally. I saw another article about it today, and thought that it was actually that hilariously ill-conceived social media company that came up with the idea of being able to rate other people, like Yelp. They seemed genuinely confused when there was a backlash over the idea that someone could publicly rate you, without your blessing.TIL there was a thing called Klout.
Did that one ever get off the ground? I know they decided to only collect ratings on willing participants, but that was an amazing example of the entire internet saying "NO!" in one unified voice.
That was written 2 years ago,[url=https://locusmag.com/2016/03/cory-doctorow-wealth-inequality-is-even-worse-in-reputation-economies/:2o0i05f6 said:Cory Doctorow[/url]":2o0i05f6]
Whuffie has all the problems of money, and then a bunch more that are unique to it. In Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, we see how Whuffie – despite its claims to being ‘‘meritocratic’’ – ends up pooling up around sociopathic jerks who know how to flatter, cajole, or terrorize their way to the top. Once you have a lot of Whuffie – once a lot of people hold you to be reputable – other people bend over backwards to give you opportunities to do things that make you even more reputable, putting you in a position where you can speechify, lead, drive the golden spike, and generally take credit for everything that goes well, while blaming all the screw-ups on lesser mortals.
[...]
It’s bad enough when the meritocratic delusion takes root in a money-driven economy, but reputation’s one percenters are even more toxic. They can go spectacularly bankrupt, financially ruining their investors, and promptly raise another fortune to gamble on.
Reputation is a terrible currency.
[...]
reputation is useless as a hedge against the real nightmare of a setup like Ebay: the long con
[...]
If [Peeple] ever took off, it’d be a lever that the likes of Gamergate could use to destroy your’s employment and personal life, possibly permanently, just by mass-one-starring you.
[...]
But Peeple is a modest effort compared to ‘‘Citizen Scores,’’ the for-now-voluntary service run by the Chinese government in partnership with Tencent (a huge social media and games company) and Alibaba (China’s answer to Amazon). Your citizen score is visible to everyone the government wants – buying socially approved items, undertaking approved leisure activities, adhering to rules and regulations, and socializing with other high-score individuals. Of course, not doing these things makes your score go down. Just being friends with low-scoring individuals drags your own score down, creating a powerful incentive to conform.
Mandatory Citizen Scores are being phased in over the next decade, and with other ‘‘soft’’ tools of control developed by China, it promises to be more powerful than any overt coercion.
[...]
Citizen Scores are a near-perfect expression of reputation economics: like most other forms of currency, they are issued by a central bank that uses them to try and influence social outcomes. In this case, those outcomes are perfect obedience to the state.
How could I forget about it!Came for a "Meow Meow Beenz" reference...
Left disappointed...
I'm still wondering about some edge cases...I'm starting to think the GDPR is one of the best things to ever happen to the internet.
Where else will I go when I want to bro down and crush code?
edit:
For fuck sake what the fuck is with the downvotes?
Do you people not know anything?!
Seriously, people..
http://jonathonhill.net/wp-content/uplo ... rodown.jpg
I'm sure that they'll do.Where else will I go when I want to bro down and crush code?
edit:
For fuck sake what the fuck is with the downvotes?
Do you people not know anything?!
Seriously, people..
http://jonathonhill.net/wp-content/uplo ... rodown.jpg
Ahh.. those guys. Felt like I'd heard the name before but couldn't put any kind of product to it.
I sincerely hope that the next generation will look back on the Social Network craze much like mine looked back on the hippy movement: "OK guys I kind of get the idea, but seriously, you thought that'd work out long term?"
purchased for 100 million, fucking crazy.
edit:
For fuck sake what the fuck is with the downvotes?
Do you people not know anything?!
Honestly, I'd never heard of Klout before today, let alone some meme about it. So no, I know nothing it seems.
EDIT: No, I didn't downvote you, but if you post a reference to a meme, you can be pretty sure there's going to be a significant percentage of people who don't get it. That's the risk with referential humour.
More like "I didn't get your in-reference and so I didn't think it was funny, didn't add to the discussion, so downvoted."edit:
For fuck sake what the fuck is with the downvotes?
Do you people not know anything?!
Honestly, I'd never heard of Klout before today, let alone some meme about it. So no, I know nothing it seems.
EDIT: No, I didn't downvote you, but if you post a reference to a meme, you can be pretty sure there's going to be a significant percentage of people who don't get it. That's the risk with referential humour.
"I don't understand it, therefore, I oppose it! HULK SMASH!! HULK DOWNVOTE!!"
More like "I didn't get your in-reference and so I didn't think it was funny, didn't add to the discussion, so downvoted."edit:
For fuck sake what the fuck is with the downvotes?
Do you people not know anything?!
Honestly, I'd never heard of Klout before today, let alone some meme about it. So no, I know nothing it seems.
EDIT: No, I didn't downvote you, but if you post a reference to a meme, you can be pretty sure there's going to be a significant percentage of people who don't get it. That's the risk with referential humour.
"I don't understand it, therefore, I oppose it! HULK SMASH!! HULK DOWNVOTE!!"
It's amazing how some people accuse anyone of downvoting their "jokes" as "someone with no sense of humor." Maybe you're just not that fucking funny. Almost like mindlessly regurgitating memes isn't really original or clever?
During the brief interactions I had with Klout, I found that they managed to combine the comically incorrect with the frighteningly accurate.
A mix between "seriously? why do you think I'm an expert in that topic, when I only mentioned once it in passing?" and "woah. How the hell did they know that I've got knowledge in that topic when I make a point of never discussing it anywhere on social media?"