I've Never Downvoted Content, Here's Why...

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(Edited)

In Almost 6 Years on Hive, I've Never Downvoted Content - Here's Why... @EverNoticeThat httpshive.blog@evernoticethat.jpg

I can still remember my first downvote. I'd been struggling as many new people do, but had lately after about a year of what was then known as Steemit, begun to find my sea legs, and slowly started to gain some traction.

Yet I Persisted...

As now, back then very few people saw my content. It wasn't unusual to spend hours, days, or even a week researching a subject, creating the blog post, and seeing a big fat zero in terms of engagement and support. Yet I persisted, knowing that if I kept it up, sooner or later I'd break through.

Then it started happening... Nothing huge mind you, as I've never been a trending centerfold pinup, but things had begun to change and I was excited to help contribute to the platform in its very early days.

Part of that change came from engagement, which I encourage those new to Hive to engage in. I'd find interesting posts and leave a comment, and in that way, I was becoming more known to members of the community.

Three Little Words...

One day, Ned the leader of Steemit, made a post and I left a comment not dreaming that it would result in my first ever downvote. The comment?

"I love Steemit."

That was it, nothing else. I then left to start my day and anticipated answering any responses to the various comments I'd left earlier that day. What greeted me upon my return was disturbing...

Instead of a response to my innocuous engagement, someone had come along and left my first downvote. I could feel a blush of trepidation as I clicked through to see what had happened.

According to Tim Cliff, the downvoter had had a beef with Ned the CEO of Steemit, and gone in downvoted anyone who had anything positive to say about the platform. I was collateral damage, just one of many he'd hit all at once that day.

Some whales might not understand it, but as a new person trying to make a good name for himself here, I was devastated until I found out it had nothing to do with me or my content, and was just a personal conflict between him and Ned, and I want to thank Tim for looking into that and getting back to me (thanks Tim!). It was such a relief to know I'd done nothing to deserve that downvote.

That downvote was one of the reasons I didn't rush to delete my account when the fork happened. The memory of that and the other downvoting gang stayed with me.

Just in case the new place turned into Nazi Germany full of power-hungry autocrats, I didn't want to lose all of the work that I'd built up over the years, and I never forgot my grandmothers warning: "Don't put all your eggs in one basket." She grew up on a farm and learned from painful personal lessons. The lady knew her stuff. So it sits there, gathering dust.

Word somehow got back to Ned, and he left me a huge upvote to compensate, something north of $20 or so. I was elated, and immediately powered it up.

Here's Why I Don't Downvote

Number 1, it's corrosive.

So many good people have been driven off the platform by others drunk with power forming downvoting gangs. I'll never forget the new guy who was convinced to join by his friend, and then signed up with a downvoters club his very first day. I'm thinking "so you joined Steemit not to participate and help grow the community, but simply to use your vote to tear people down."

My attitude is that If I don't like someone's content, I simply don't upvote it. Now on the other hand, there's a certain region of the world: those who know, know, I won't name it, that's becoming known as a hotbed of copyist and mimic plagiarism. Lately, they've gotten slick after being caught directly stealing other people's work, and instead of blatantly copying content, they "mimic" it, and have been handsomely rewarded for their efforts.

They'll subtly rewrite someone else's blog posts. Work that the original creator might have spent hours or even days researching, writing and editing. This allows them to avoid the effort involved in doing the work themselves, and in many cases, they're rewarded far beyond the level of the original writer.

It's lazy, but it works, or else they wouldn't keep doing it.

However, when you copy, you don't grow as a creator of original content.

It's interesting to watch them scouring Hive for good writers to steal from. If you take the original work and place it next to the copycats, you can see what they're doing and how they do it.

Last year I smiled watching a "blogger" brag about how "creative" he was and that this was why he was making so much money on Hive. One day I was reading his posts, and thought I saw something familiar.

By complete chance, I'd read the post he copied from first, then clicked through trending and found his. The copying was remarkable, and if I hadn't by chance read the original work first, I might never have noticed it.

I went back to the original post written by the other creator putting them side by side, and you could see where he went paragraph by paragraph, using the first one as a template in order to build a copy of his own. Then, lest someone notice the all-too-similar familarity, he'd swapped two of the eight paragraphs places in order to hide the mimic even better. But I saw it and others did too...

It's exactly their lack of creativity and originality which cause them to need to shoplift content from others.

I get it. English isn't their first language, but that's just sad and pathetic. I'm sure they know somebody in their village or campus that speaks proper English and can help edit their work. But for them, it's easier to take from the hard work and creativity of others.

There are groups here that downvote people like that and those who they say have been excessively rewarded. I'll never forget a person who'd been told to write an apology post for content they'd stolen. Astonished, I watched as the original post remained in trending, and get this: the apology post itself, trended as well...

So what lesson did they learn from all that? What's the takeaway for them? Aside from a little public embarrassment, there was no real consequence at all. They didn't decline payment on the posts, and the upvotes continued to roll in unabated.

I may not trend day after day, but everything I publish is my own content from my own head and based on my own research. Each post can sometimes take hours to write just the skeleton. Then I pore over the details, tweaking it for readability while trying to quash as many grammatical bugs as possible before publishing.

The graphic at the top of this page alone, took an hour from concept to finished piece. I don't just slap the items together, each element is tweaked, resized, and carefully placed, often going through many iterations before it's done.

Th title itself was changed six times, with the original being much longer, before I boiled it down to the current one. And don't even get me started on fonts, I went through at least 20 of them before settling on the final one (everything has to be just so, know what I mean?). The post you're reading is shorter than the first draft, as I always "overwrite" before paring back. When complete, it's like sending a newborn out into the world.

No copying needed.

Creating original content can require a lot of effort, but I receive pure joy in creating something, where nothing existed before. It never gets old.

The downvote is considered an effective tool by some people for abusers like that, but I have another focus.

Growing Hive Is My Goal

I want to grow the numbers here on Hive. While action may, be warranted against the mimics and copyists, we want to avoid the growth of the "Little Hitlers" we had on the old platform which caused the exodus of so many good people.

We need to always remember why we built this place, and have growth in mind, while creating a welcoming environment and keep that as our north star. If we do, we'll have a future so bright, we'll have to wear shades. :)

If you found this post informative or inspiring, please leave an upvote, comment and reblog. And if you haven't already: Join Hive! :)

Please check out my recent posts:

Image Credit: [1] @EverNoticeThat Created using Canva.




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9 comments
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I 100% relate to you. I don't think I've ever downvoted, in over 5.5 years on here, for similar reasons.
It's negative energy and does more harm than it does good ( if it does any good at all ).

I'm glad there's still people like you ( and me ) creating original content, in this world taken over, step by step, by A.I. ;<)

I never forgot my grandmothers warning: "Don't put all your eggs in one basket." She grew up on a farm and learned from painful lessons. The lady knew her stuff.

Your grandma was a wise women. It reminded me of an original Hypersensitivosaurus story that I wrote earlier this year. It might put a smile on your face:

The Bear Markt 2 - Don't Put All Your Eggs in one Basket

Enjoy the remainder of your day!

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Thanks, and I''l be sure and check your work out. You mention AI, and I wonder if people will start using that to mass auto-generate blog posts on the fly. We're living in interesting times! :)

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I sure could use A.I. for my work, if I wanted to. It's just that I feel like it goes totally against my creative process and feeling is what I do, these days, leading to a more fulfilled life.

I am sure many are already using it to blog.

Interesting times indeed :<)

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I've downvoted before. Both on posts that were definitely not meant to get any rewards (plagiarism and full copy & pasted articles), but I have actually downvoted out of spite more times. Funnily, against people that were downvoting me due to that whole disagreement and power distribution thing that appears around here. Though less often than it used to be on the old chain. No idea how I managed to come out on top, but I guess this was when whales were not as large as they now are, and less people were likely to put in effort to just script you into an auto downvoting bot of theirs.

There's groups and actions I definitely don't agree with on here. As well as posts tht I would definitely say are not worthy of the rewards they're getting, but I don't bother to downvote anyone unless they're really a bad actor like mentioned before. I just stick to my own interests and community and ignore most of Hive to avoid potential clashes.

I do think some of the larger people on here are a bit trigger happy with their votes. Both rewards and removing of rewards. But I guess the best thing is to stick to your own lane and just build your own stake and become the user on the chain you'd like to see. ;^)

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That last line of yours says it all, doesn't it? :) It's ironic that having my work stolen on Blogger is what brought me here in the first place. The thief would copy my entire article, strip out my byline, then present it as his own. I even offered to have him list me as a guest blogger for a share of the ad revenue, but he refused, and actually wanted me to blog faster so he could steal more of my work.

But I think that Hive is like an undiscovered jewel just waiting to be found. Being here now must be like it was in an article I read about some kids who caught Nirvana back when they were an unknown local band before they blew up. They knew they were a part of something special, and so are we. :)

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Without flags the bots would have pushed everybody else out by now.

It takes a special person to do anti-abuse work, it is easier done when power hungry, and doing the work predisposes one to adopting this characteristic, but that doesn't absolve every stakehodler of their duty to protect their investment from counterfeiters devaluing their work and their stake.

Those people capable of doing this work long term also need people to ride herd on them to keep them from getting the big head.
You can't do that without knowing what is being flagged, and by whom.

Throwing the flags is not for everybody, I don't do it and I am an early adopter of the anti-abuse community, but I do follow along and defend those I think inappropriately flagged, when I can.
For those I can't help with stake, I usually help with an explanation and the suggestion that they correct their behavior so that their problems go away.

So, as a stakehodler, I want to ask that you reconsider your choice to not join the anti-abuse crowd.
At least, peripherally as an observer.

More voices equals better consensus.

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If I were a whale, things might be different. Time is also a factor, as the "responsible" one in my family, I have a very elderly relative to care for, with work and school conspiring to drain my time away. The grifter drug addicts in my family leave me no choice but to do this alone, as I have to also protect my ailing relative (the matriarch of our clan) from their continued financial predations.

So I have a lot on my plate.

I do hear you though, something has always needed to be done. However, that type of work tends to attract a certain psychopathic, narcissistic type you know what I mean? And in my opinion, being power-hungry shouldn't be part of the equation. So I know, it is complicated. It's sort of like; we do need cops, but we don't need bad cops. But then again some would say bad cops are better than no cops.

I also think having a large stake helps one stay above the attacks sure to come. Last year I had to drain my stake in order to assist my ill relative, and am clawing my way back bit by bit. But I do love to write and only want the best for Hive.

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warning: "Don't put all your eggs in one basket."

This is my mantra.

My attitude is that If I don't like someone's content, I simply don't upvote it.

X2. I have a friend on this platform, well several, but a wale take it against him, that wale owns several community and not only downvote all he post, but his "gang" too. ¿The reason? He dare to answer a question this person ask. This wale has left very clear that he is a God. And he and his people downvote whoever they want, even if the post is from another community.

There are groups here that downvote people like that and those who they say have been excessively rewarded.

Totally agree.

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