
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- tcmay@got.net (Timothy C. May) writes:
To stick with my restaurant example, consider _advertising_. MacDonald's and Burger King spend hundreds of millions of dollars every year claiming their "restaurants" are great. Many millions of people obviously are swayed. So?
Others choose not to trust the advice of the MacDonald's hucksters. Maybe only a tiny fraction choose Chez Panisse over MacDonald's. This is the way of the world.
It's still the give and take of reputations. It ain't perfect (in that it doesn't produce results I believe are empirically valid and optimum :-}). But it's all we have. It's the market. The agora.
I'm reading "It's shaky. Accept that." Fine, consider it accepted. I don't think it is comparable to the market, simply because even the more nebulous market exchanges (say, consultant-on-call) are much more clearly defined.
"Reputation capital" is hard to spend down to absolute 0 because it is significant work to distinguish valid "reputation capital" from worthless counterfeit, and it is easy to counterfeit... just talk.
I strongly disagree. It's quite possible for Person A to quickly convert his reputation to Person B to a _negative_ value. Real quick, in fact.
I don't see how there can be such a thing as negative reputation capital. Wouldn't that mean B believes the opposite of what A says? If you anti-believed someone in a consistent manner, couldn't they exploit that? Also, you are speaking only of 1-to-1 reputation-relationships. But that is inefficient. The mere fact of having to evaluate each person's reputation yourself is significant work. On the other hand, you could talk about the transmission of reputations. This seems more in line with what I understood "reputation" to mean, to include some element of indirect knowledge. But that's mighty easy to abuse and therefore mighty hard to trust. For instance, when a certain infamously-low-reputation (deservedly so) individual recently joined the cypherpunk lists, others who had endured him in the past tried to relay their impressions of him. It proved very difficult to convey, and they were somewhat attacked for their efforts and not entirely believed. In other words, he *could not* spend down to 0, despite years of unflagging effort.
Perhaps my short article did not fully explain a few things. Reputations are a _tensor_ or _matrix_ quantity. Person A has a reputation R(A,B) to Person B, a reputation R(A,C) to Person C, and so on. (And the matrix may be further broken down into reputations for advice on various subjects, in various fields, etc.)
I can't dispute or agree with your mathematical model until we can agree on more basic issues.
We may lump a lot of folks together and say, for example, that MacDonald's has a reputation of R (MacDonald's, lots of people) = 0.7531. And perhaps R (Chez Panisse, lots of people) = 0.0013 (i.e., they don't know what it is, and so value the rep of Chez Panisse at near zero).
And so on. Lots of examples could be given.
I'll accept your example, but I don't see how the numbers are meaningful.
Now suppose that J. Anonymous Gourmand announces that MacDonald's is shit. How much will anonymous claim hurt MacDonald's? Obviously, not much.
Well, how many people did J. Anonymous Gourmand reach, anyways? Now, suppose J. Anonymous Gourmand spams all of Usenet, and millions of people who have never heard of J. Anonymous Gourmand before read a plausible but false account of the disgustingness of McDonald's food. Perhaps the same detailed study, just fake. (Not to intertangle this with other issues, let's further suppose that Ms. Gourmand sneaks in underneath spam-watcher's radar, and cleverly appears to be on topic in every group.) Nothing about her reputation has changed, but surely when her claim is read by millions it will hurt McDonalds a non-trivial amount. Again, that doesn't mean the reputation was not a factor.
But what if the American Heart Association publishes a detailed study on the fat levels of MacDonald's products and declares it to "Dangerous." The effect will probably be greater, as R (AHA, many people) = high, and by the kind of Dempster-Shafer belief calculus I discussed a few months ago, the rep of the AHA propagates semi-transitively to the rep of MacDonald's.
(This all happened recently, with the famous studies of fat levels of movie theater food...sales dropped almost overnight, and now the fat levels of popcorn, etc., have been changed for the better.)
I don't think you are illustrating what you think you are. Consider the American Sociological Association. Wouldn't you say its reputation is equivalent to the American Heart Association's? Most people would, I think. And various claims by ASA members have certainly gotten as much press as anything the AHA has got. But the ASA winks at severe violations of its Code Of Ethics and lets its members pursue their Politically Correct agendas at the expense of science. They have effectively counterfeited a reputation. I've already made the points I wanted to make, so I may not have further comments. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.1 iQBVAwUBMi9qpbMyVAabpHidAQFRnwH8CyCjOnz071ZMWXNNURR/NMSMw9y9bs+n dutQOqLSNqeJhsYwNZJP2Z1o+JdhWZ7sQ/xnhdWbdupYsoRhcpacpA== =zcJQ -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----

Timothy C. May wrote:
From daemon Fri Sep 6 17:08:18 1996 Date: Thu, 5 Sep 1996 10:27:34 -0700 X-Sender: tcmay@mail.got.net Message-Id: <ae545aa807021004884d@[207.167.93.63]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" To: cypherpunks@toad.com From: tcmay@got.net (Timothy C. May) Subject: Metcalf and Other Net.Fogies Sender: owner-cypherpunks@toad.com Precedence: bulk X-Status:
I'm evolving a hunch that the problems we're seeing with "old fogies" denouncing the Net, and anonymity, and "smut on the Net," are part of a larger cultural issue. Namely, the familiar case of an older generation complaining about the sloth and sin of the younger generations. (Caveat: I'm 44, so I'm certainly a generation older than many of you, and am about the same age, give or take a few years, of Dyson, Metcalfe, Kapor, Denning, and the other Net.Doomsayers. However, 20-25 years ago, when I was in college, I recall of course similar predictions of disaster. (And as it turned out, the predictions that promiscuity would lead to a disaster turned out to be partly correct, viz. AIDS.)) Robert Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet and founder of 3COM, and how publisher of "Infoworld" and sailing enthusiast, was interviewed on CNBC a few minutes ago. He repeated his prediction of an "Internet collapse" in 1996, based on overuse, on bad pricing models, on lack of controls, and on other concerns. It could be that the Dennings, Dysons, Kapors, etc. of the world are simply growing jaded with the Net and are projecting their own ennui in their comments that the Net may need to be controlled. This may come with age, as I'm sure the Kapor of 25 years ago would not have wanted President Nixon and Attorney-General Mitchell telling him what he could read and write. (In fairness, none of these folks listed have called for censorship. But all have expressed "concerns" of one sort or another. Not that discussing concerns is inappropriate--after all, we do it all the time. But I sense in many of their phrasings of concerns a stereotypical "old fogeyness" emerging.) Just a thought. Maybe the solution to the EFF problem is to "not trust anyone over 30." --Tim May (untrustable since 1981) We got computers, we're tapping phone lines, I know that that ain't allowed. ---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@got.net 408-728-0152 | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero W.A.S.T.E.: Corralitos, CA | knowledge, reputations, information markets, Higher Power: 2^1,257,787-1 | black markets, collapse of governments. "National borders aren't even speed bumps on the information superhighway." -- Vipul Ved Prakash | - Electronic Security & Crypto vipul@pobox.com | - Internet & Intranets 91 11 2247802 | - Web Development & PERL 198 Madhuban IP Extension | - Linux & Open Systems Delhi, INDIA 110 092 | - (Networked) Multimedia
participants (2)
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gregburk@netcom.com
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Vipul Ved Prakash