Once in a while, the moderators will find out that something like the following happened:
- Someone posted an update from their organization, and shared it on Slack or social media, asking coworkers and friends to go upvote it for increased visibility.
- Someone saw something they didn’t like on the Forum — maybe comments criticizing a friend, or a point of view they disagree with — and encouraged everyone in some discussion space to go downvote it.
This is a form of vote brigading. It messes with karma’s ability to provide people with a signal of what to engage with and is against Forum norms.
Please don’t do it. We might ban you for it.
If you’re worried that someone else (or some other group) is engaging in vote brigading, bring it up to the moderators instead of trying to correct for it.
Why is it bad?
- Karma is meant to provide a signal of what Forum users will find useful to engage with. Vote brigading turns karma into a popularity contest.
- Voting should be based on readers’ opinions of the content they’re voting on. If someone convinces you that a post is terrible — or great — it’s fine to downvote or upvote it as a result of that, but you should actually believe that.
- We should resolve disagreements by discussing them, not by comparing the sizes of the groups who agree with each position.
- If people try to hide criticism by downvoting it just because they feel an affinity to the group(s) criticized, the Forum will become predictably biased. We won’t have important conversations, we won’t learn from each others’ mistakes, etc.
What actions should we avoid? (What counts as vote brigading?)
If you’re sharing content:
- Don’t encourage people to all go upvote or downvote something (“everyone go upvote this!”) — especially when you have power over the people you’re talking to.
- It’s more ok to say “go upvote this if you think it’s good,” but it’s still borderline, and you should be careful to make sure that it doesn’t feel like pressure on people.
- Be careful with bias: if the content is criticizing your work, or your friend’s work, or something you feel an affinity towards — be suspicious of your ability to objectively engage with it.
- Consider letting other Forum users sort it out or leaving a comment explaining your point of view.
If you’re voting:
- Please make sure you’re really voting because you think this content is good.
- If your friends or coworker shared their content and that’s the only thing you really engage with and vote on, interrogate your heart or mind about whether you might be biased.
- Please report attempts at vote brigading to us.
Examples
There are many borderline cases. Here are some examples, sorted by how fine/bad the action of person sharing the content is:
The action | Is it ok to do? |
You share a post (and maybe what you like or dislike about it), without explicitly asking people to upvote or downvote. | It’s fine (I’m very happy for people to straightforwardly share posts with people who might find them interesting) |
You share a post and what you like about it, and say something like “upvote the post if you like it” | Iffy, but mostly ok. The problem is that people might vote reflexively as a result (or follow this like an order, if you’re in a leadership role), so I think that’s the main thing to be wary of. I think the situation is worse for downvoting than for upvoting, here (coordination on downvoting can suppress a post) — see below. |
You share a post that criticizes your work, and write something like “downvote the post if you think it should have less visibility” | Not ok — even though there’s an “if…”. Don’t do this, especially if you’re in a leadership role. |
You share a post and say something like “Everyone: go upvote the post!” | Not ok. Once again, it’s even worse if you’re in a leadership role with respect to the people you’re sharing the post with. |
On a call with other people, and you say, “there’s this post I don’t like / a post that’s criticizing me/us. Could you all upvote / downvote it?” | Extremely not ok. This has the added harm of making it easy for the asker to see if the other people on the call downvoted the post. |
Other voting norms
You can see the full voting norms here. Most importantly, don't do the following:
- “Mass voting” on many instances of a user’s content simply because it belongs to that user
- Using multiple accounts to vote on the same post or comment
If you have any concerns, you can get in touch with the moderation team[1] by emailing forum-moderation@effectivealtruism.org.
- ^
The current active moderators are me, @Lorenzo Buonanno, and @JP Addison, but the email reaches the whole team (including advisors), and the Forum team — you can get in touch with individual moderators by DMing us on the Forum.
It is true that vote brigading may be worse than the forum's unequal karma system, because, as you point out, at least popularity on this forum is more likely to be related to have more justified opinions on posts and comments on this forum.
However, unequal voting still falsely equates popularity - specifically, popularity on this forum - with expertise. There are several reasons why this is problematic. First, it excludes expertise from outside of the effective altruism movement: people with truly valuable perspectives and relevant expertise who are not affiliated with effective altruism have less voting power and may be less likely to get upvoted by the more popular users, who may fail to appreciate valuable new perspectives they are not used to. Second, it overgeneralizes expertise: for example, someone who might have earned a lot of karma by writing on x-risks can now also cast more votes on posts completely unrelated to that (such as posts on global health and animal advocacy), which makes no sense. Third, it privileges the most active commenters: since karma from votes on posts and karma from votes on comments both count towards the same overall karma score, someone who has written a small number of excellent, well-researched posts may have far less karma (and thus far less voting power) than someone who has written dozens of mediocre (but not bad) comments, especially if these comments are under recent or popular posts (where comments are most likely to be upvoted). Fourth, it privileges individuals who were already quite influential in the effective altruism movement when they created their forum account: they will find it far, far easier to collect karma than those who are both new and unknown in the effective altruism movement. Perhaps all these problems explain why almost no website ever uses the same unequal voting system found on this forum.
And even if is true that users with more karma deserve to have more voting power, then the current voting system is still unreasonably disproportional. The difference in voting power between less and more popular users should at the very least be considerably reduced. Maybe it is acceptable to have something where users who have 1,000 or more karma should have a strong upvote of 3 and a regular upvote of 1, and not, as it is currently the case, overall voting power that is about twice as strong as that of users with less than 250 karma. You said you think the karma system should be reformed, so I hope you are in favor of changes like these.