Randeel said:
This is the dumbest thread I have seen in a long time.
And this is one of the few things I refuse to back down on -- Just because a problem isn't readily apparent doesn't mean it won't become one in the future. There are some solutions that I think won't work at all (as I've echoed above), but for some I think they will.
The reservation proposal makes sense to me, because it essentially says "alright, I'm uploading this, it's already on the server, and if I don't finish upping it with proper tags in 3-5 minutes then you are free to nab it from me", and if someone else manages to upload a file with the same exact md5/source link then their name goes on it instead, with very effort wasted on the site's end. At least that way we have a proper establishment of dedication to uploading a post well-tagged from the get-go.
That also means that if you're busy tagging a post, you finish tagging that post before you attend to any other uploads -- you don't let go of your opt-in until you're finished uploading what you chose to upload. Think of it as a kind of lock. Some uploaders have literally no shame when it comes 00:00 JST and will just 1-3tag snipe everything just to update it with marginal tags 10-20 minutes later, this will prevent them from being an upload whore.
BrokenEagle98 said:
Ah, you mean forum #119287...? I got considerable pushback when I first introduced that concept, so I stopped all work. Also, it would be a bit unlike all other reports, since the availability of the data needed is short-lived as upload records get deleted after 36 hours. Therefore, it would be impossible to prove that the report was in fact genuine. Though I could give it a go again, if people are interested.
I'm putting in a word for this -- this will be pretty useful for determining who is tagging what with due diligence, and to prevent poorly considered promotions for unlimited upload privs.
Anyways, I'm going to echo again that the problem with this perception is that upload sniping doesn't become a problem until it does. DakuTree was pretty dumb years ago to attempt taking matters into his own hands without proper input from a higher-staffed member, but he brought an extremely important concern to the table that has gone overlooked for years, and that is this:
- If it doesn't matter who uploads what, then why does it matter when I automate the process to level the field for everyone?
And besides, at least DT had the audacity to publicly document that his uploads were coming from a bot. If a user is uncanny enough, then as I said before -- they could just code a bot/script to monitor trusted artists' Twitter/pixiv accounts and upload posts literally the very same minute they do, and padding the tags only after such and such human user gets back and tags it properly. And they wouldn't mention this to anyone, simply claiming that they saw a good upload and upped it by hand to claim they'll 'tag it later'.
Not to mention the fact that it'll look like they are amazing taggers too. If such a user was smart enough, heck, they could even monitor the upload listing just to snipe tags from other users that uploaded duplicates of the post they sniped.
And then you wonder, are these the kinds of users that really deserve the unlimited uploads permission? Do we want these kinds of users to be representative of the tagging and uploading behavior that goes on the site? What's it say about the way we consider potential users to be promoted for "high quality uploads"?
These propositions are things that will help prevent a problems like these from happening in the first place. I don't see it as dumb at all, and just waving it off and saying "it's not really a problem" is plain ignorant IMO. If it's not really a problem then why did so many people start giving a shit when a highly trusted user started doing it, when absolutely nowhere did it say he couldn't? A Moderator-level user had to dictate that matter to him through a negative feedback, but the possibility is there that it may happen again whether anyone likes it or not.