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Re: [Bug-gnupedia] Ratings
From: |
Rob Scott |
Subject: |
Re: [Bug-gnupedia] Ratings |
Date: |
Sat, 20 Jan 2001 16:53:04 +0000 (GMT) |
But the problem is you might get the scored leaking
between each other... i dont think the second score
would work, mainly because of common opinion.
For instance, if someone wrote an entry saying that
edison invented the lightbulb, everyone would give him
a good score, because it is common opinion that he
did.
However if someone wrote an article saying that Joseph
Swan invented it, he would get a bad score, no matter
how right he was. This would be effectively putting
a voting slip at the bottom saying 'WHO THINKS I'M
RIGHT?'.
This is not a popularity contest.
However i do think that the first score would be a
good idea.
--- Peteris Paikens <address@hidden> wrote: > I
beleive that with whatever rating system used,
> we need to separate two
> different ratings :
> 1) 'article' rating - how well the article is
> written, how informative it
> is, etc;
> 2) 'subject' rating - how accurate, or truthful it
> seems. For non-exact
> sciences it is hard to tell about truthfulness, as
> it was mentioned about
> topics like nazis, eveolution, and many others, but
> some are more plausible
> than others, and this rating should reflect is.
>
> The point is to separate things such as sloppy
> article on, let's say, law of
> gravity, from a well written article that claims
> things that the reviewer
> does not agree to.
>
> articles with bad 1st rating would wither be
> rewritten or tossed out, but
> articles with a bad 2nd rating would show
> alternative viewpoints and would
> be marked as such, and the reader would choose
> wether to view such articles
> or not.
>
> _______________________________________________
> Bug-gnupedia mailing list
> address@hidden
> http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-gnupedia
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