Scott wrote:As far as the thumbs up/thumbs down thing, I am skeptical that it would make things better. I'm guessing that just about everyone voting will just vote thumbs up on everything. Any thumbs down vote is going to make people mad, even if made constructively. Besides, if a page is just OK, how would you vote it? A thumbs up would mean that the page is fine and the owner of the page might take that as meaning that it doesn't need any work. A thumbs down is going to be seen as negative. It's a sure bet that people are just going to vote thumbs up on everything.
I agree with this. The real solution to the voting issue is adjusting the method so that voting a 9/10 does not lower the score. It has been made too complicated than it needs to be. Shouldn't the score simply be an average of the votes? I am not a mathematician, but that seems simple and fair. If this were the case, then you would get lower over all scores on pages but they would reflect people thoughts on a page more accurately. A page with a score of 80% would be a pretty good score. Right now, that would indicate a sub-par page.
This method would decrease the relevance of power points, but I think that other weighting members opinions, measuring volume of contributions and perhaps page creation and editing privileges, the points don't matter much anyway. I mean, they increase vote weight, but that is marginal compared to the broken voting system.
The real challenge would be how to retroactively grade the pages under the current voting rubric.
Does this seem that simple or am I missing something?