I Miss Those Days

in The Pub3 months ago

Last week I accidentally went down the rabbit hole, again. I noticed a username among the voters, one I used to know back in the day, so to speak, which means the legacy chain obviously and went to check them out. I knew they are not active posting anymore, unfortunately, but wanted to see if they comment at all.

Looking through their blog, that is not active since 2021, brought back so many nice memories. Reading through the comments made me realize how many good content creators are not with us anymore and how the userbase has changed. I don't even dare to make a list with all those who I used to engage with on the legacy chain and are not active, as it's going to hurt to see the number and know who's not active anymore would hurt even more.

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Photo by Benjamin Hibbert-Hingston on Unsplash

You could argue about the reasons all day, I bet the majority would say current rate of $HIVE does not worth it, but this is just one of the possible reasons, there are several other reasons for why one could take a break or quit and may not even be related to these reasons. I'm not going to get into it as each case is different, some get tired of writing, others have demanding jobs, or family problems, only they know the reason.

What I'd like to write about today is how people tend to be blinded or tend to try to blind others by talking about numbers only. Statistics are good, granting you a glimpse into what has changed and how, but that's not all. We get data about active users, new accounts created, number of onboarded users and so on, but you never see any data based on demographics as you have the privilege to keep your identity secret on Hive and it's up to you how much you reveal about yourself and your life.

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Photo by Christian Lue on Unsplash

However, after almost eight years on the chain, I can tell with approximation where the user is from, based on their content. Now, before you jump to conclusion, what is important here is not their location, but the content they are posting, which unfortunately, is heavily influenced by their culture and where they are coming from. Is this important? What do you think?

Over the years a lot of effort and even more money has gone into onboarding campaigns (this is what they call it), but if you look at the areas where these efforts have been concentrated, you can see underdeveloped and developing countries have been targeted mostly. Maybe I'm wrong as I don't have all the official data, my conclusion is based on what I see on the chain, but this is what I think. I understand it's easier to convince those in need, to join and earn (most likely this is the first argument onboardrs use to convince people) and there are plenty who would do anything for a few cents or bucks (literally anything, no matter how many rules they have to break), but then comes the question of quality.

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Photo by Clay Banks on Unsplash

As a curator (if you're curating for a certain project), you check the post to be abuse free, to fit certain curation criteria and it's good to go. Then there are those who are curating abuse as well as they have no standards at all, and think making everyone happy no matter what, is the future of the chain, but that's a topic for another day.

Curating posts as a curator for a project is one thing, you don't have to necessarily like the topic, but when it comes to individuals, I mean curating for yourself, things change quite a lot. You have a different set of criteria and your interest narrows down quite a lot and this is how I'm not interested in reading posts about laundry days, lecturing about what you've heard in church, sky photos or weeds you photograph at the side of the road, or some spun article you have no understanding of, but you think it makes you look smart, or your selfies every single day and so on.

Looking at new content I think it's safe to say it has changed a lot and I put this on the geographic balance shift.

As a content consumer, you have the freedom to read and comment on what post you want and like, but as a content creator, you get comments from whoever wants and is interested (for various reasons) in commenting on your post. It's not up to you, you have no say in it. This means you get all kinds of comments, ranging from interesting, honest ones, to stupid, senseless ones from people that don't know better and think repeating what you said and agreeing with you (to give you and example) would make you like them and return the visit and start voting them. If you have a higher reputation (which is a useless metric by the way but new users tend to think it's important) and your posts hit trending, it's inevitable to attract the latter crowd.

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Photo by PJH on Unsplash

You can meet and make friends with a lot of people through comments, but making (online) friends and truly connect with people you can only do with those who you have something in common. My rule is to reply to every comment, even the stupid ones (yeah, you can get mad at me for this), except for the users I want to ignore intentionally, but that's all as I'm not going to follow you just because you comment regularly.

Most likely there will be people in the comment saying there are plenty of good content on Hive, which can be true but then again, deciding what is good is highly subjective. What I'm trying to say here is that the userbase has changed a lot, the balance has shifted towards underdeveloped and developing countries and as I see, this is the direction onboarding is focused on. Maybe it would be wise to rethink and change strategy, stop throwing money out of the window and focus on other onboarding areas as well and get the chain where it should be.

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Hive has changed a lot, especially since I joined four years ago in September. I see a lot of poor quality posts: badly written, lacking in substance, with poor-quality photos. Many good creators have left; those who remain do so because they really love what they do and they love Hive. In my case, it’s because of the opportunity to create such varied content, which I absolutely love.

The main attraction for people in developing countries is the income, and that’s just how it is; in many cases, it’s the only thing they have to put food on the table. There are realities that are so different and so contradictory. I think many strategies need to change; there needs to be a fundamental shift for things to improve.

This means you didn't catch the good old days on the legacy chain.

Quality is definitely not what it used to be, if you look at the new feed, you have to scroll for ages, to get through the low quality crap and the number those who are looking to get a quick buck committing abuse is just growing.

The number of people I’ve seen who haven’t even bothered to introduce themselves, the spammers, the people with multiple accounts… plagiarism, the use of AI… it’s staggering!!! I’ve got my list of favourites, but some of them don’t post, so I end up checking the community listings. It’s hard to find quality… let alone good writing.

A good friend told me about those days... I’m a bit late to the party; I would have loved to have started sooner. But anyway, here I am!

Yeah, I think life will never be the same regarding content. Those days are gone.

I wish I’d been there at the time...😌

I have a broad interest. So my feed probably looks like a schizophrenics. LOL

Enjoy reading about gardens, peoples runs, ART EXHIBIT TOURS, trips around the globe, home improvements, coins, and just daily mundane stuff people do.

Not sure I am qualified to comment on quality, as like you said, it is subjective. Also, my writing slacks off here. It is the place I come to relax and share thoughts and feelings. So no doubt there are folks who do not care to read my drivel.

I do agree that maybe onboarding needs to target a different market. But we also need a better way to index sites on the blockchain. There are so many tools, games and resources to keep track of. A new person is just expected to find most by accident or referral.

Not sure I am qualified to comment on quality, as like you said, it is subjective.

You're as qualified as anyone else here. We all have our standards and opinion, so ... Basically blogging should be fun and entertaining, and not like writing your dissertation or an atomic research paper, as some are thinking, but still, there has to be some kind or standard.

Ultimately, there's a lot of work still to be done and maybe I'll put together a post on what I am personally missing here, let's see if devs can do something about it.

My dear teacher @erikah. I have told you many times that I made a mistake because I did not know the rules of Hive. I have apologized many times but you have not forgiven me. I promised you that I would work 100% on my own content but even then you did not give me any chance. I am giving you what I have earned from the tokens so far and I am also giving you the RC that I have. My only request to you is, please punish my ID in such a way that it becomes an example in Hive of how terrible the punishment is for passing off other people's content as your own. And my other request to you is, immediately send a notification about the rules of Hive to those who will new join Hive, so that they understand from the beginning what can and cannot be done. With this slander, I am leaving. Be well my dear teacher, take care of yourself.

Mby are those days absolutely gone... When decentralization, fundaments and usecases in crypto mean something. Hivers mby changes, but world changes too :/

I was referring exclusively to content in my post.

Wow, I agree with you. I'm from the developing world, I'm on Hive, and I can't invest, but it's one of my goals for the future. I'm excited about the idea of ​​big investors coming to Hive.

via Apps from

Investing or keeping your earnings is a good strategy, if you can afford it.

I didn't know that replying agreement was viewed as sucking up here. I was wondering if some people just don't like being agreed with. When I started, users freely upvoted comments. Makes it kinda boring to see posts upvoted much but with no replies. I appreciate your interacting with everyone. To echo your nostalgia, it's like the old days! 😄

No, you misunderstood what I said. I meant some people have no opinion at all, just repeating what the poster said and agreeing, no matter what it is, to look good. It's not the same as being genuine.

I guess I'm trying to find a reason why an applauding reply would not get any vote or response. I was suspecting some people have most of their vote power auto-assigned to maximize return, but maybe there are people replying for the wrong reason and it became annoying.

I may have seen a few replies like you describe. Would be puzzling to figure why they replied so.