My remarks from an earlier email exchange with another member dated January 30, 2008:
"I'm with you on the rating system. It's flawed. I try to read and rate all the articles but refuse to rate the articles I don't really find very useful or original. I don't think downrating is fair without detailed and specific critique or discussion, which this system doesn't allow.
Totally original ideas are rare and are great to encounter. I'm always appreciative of old ideas reframed or presented in new ways that happen to click for me.
The current rating system is too subjective and too subject to all the odd twists that come from a total lack of standards for judging. The system is also subject to the popularity bias. I believe that the system will end up killing the original concept by discouraging members from sharing their ideas for fear of poor ratings.
I like the idea of broad, positive categories of response such as in the Yelp! system or the categories you suggested. If the article shows positive responses by broad category, as in your "helpful", "entertaining", "cutting edge", it keeps the tone positive and encouraging. If it also allows comments so people can explain their feelings about the articles and the writers and others can carry on conversations about the thoughts presented, it becomes a powerful tool to encourage discussion and evolution of the ideas while allowing disagreement. This would be a much more honest and open way to get the work accomplished that I think the founders had in mind when they set this up."
and from the next day...
"It might be a good idea to just leave the material already published where it is, as it is, and start a new program. The change over could be explained as "It isn't working as we wanted it to work, so, we are reforming it in a more honest and helpful format".
I would like to be able to rate in a positive way or not rate at all. And I would like to be able to engage the writer to support, expand on or challenge the ideas offered up.
This would still be dangerous to egos. People with positive responses could check a box and comment, if they wanted to. People with negative responses could not check a box but would have to have the guts to put their reactions out there in words attributed to themselves; and they would have to deal with other people's reactions to their comments.
If the number of people looking at the article is posted with the article, any discrepancy between number of views and the number of ratings would also be telling, but in a less brutal way than a numerical downrating. People who submit numerous articles that get high viewing numbers with no or low comment numbers would get the message that people aren't really appreciating their offerings. I think this would be good feedback.
I think an approach like I'm suggesting would be more open and honest and would be more likely to expose biases and favoritism."
I still feel the same way.