• @tronk
    link
    33 years ago

    Because Lemmy does not have karma. If it did, and it was like Reddit, it would be based on the popularity of your posts and comments, with every vote being the same weight. This is different to Stack Exchange, where people who are already well established in the respective community are able to boost correct answers even more than with a single vote. This could sound like a recipe for parochialism, but in effect you end with a high probability for high quality answers.

    This doesn’t mean that a reputation (and not “karma”) system couldn’t be implemented in Lemmy.

    • Helix
      link
      4
      edit-2
      3 years ago

      where people who are already well established in the respective community are able to boost correct answers even more than with a single vote.

      This assumes people who are competent are always right. StackOverflow fosters idiocy and ignorance. They even hide comments to the question which often start with “I have no idea why this is the top answer” and continue with a list of reasons why it’s not a good idea to just utilise the solution. They often get a lot of upvotes but ultimately are ignored because their font size is smaller and they don’t have a green arrow with 450 updoots next to them.

      Do we really want to continue supporting mindless copy&paste based programming?