To prevent users caring too much about 'damaging' their accuracy maybe we should have this instead of percentages:
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Sorry for the wall of text, but my AI response had a lot to say (below).

Yes — there are a number of systems that would likely work
better than Bitcointalk’s current “good/bad report percentage” model, depending on the forum’s goals.
Right now, Bitcointalk’s system mostly measures
accuracy, not necessarily
value. A user can maintain a very high “good” percentage by only reporting obvious spam, duplicate topics, or easy moderator actions. That does not necessarily reward users who:
- identify coordinated abuse,
- catch scams early,
- report ban evasion,
- document plagiarism thoroughly,
- or spend significant time improving forum quality.
The current system also creates a few behavioral distortions:
- users may avoid borderline reports to protect their ratio,
- users may mass-report trivial violations,
- moderators become the sole “truth source” for whether a report was “good,”
- and the public stat becomes more about reputation than actual contribution.
Some alternative or hybrid approaches could work better.
1. Weighted Report Reputation (Probably the Best Overall)Instead of counting every “good” report equally, reports could earn weighted value based on:
- severity,
- uniqueness,
- accuracy over time,
- and moderator agreement consistency.
Example:
- obvious duplicate spam = 1 point
- plagiarism with evidence = 10 points
- catching an account farm = 25 points
- identifying a phishing campaign before damage spreads = 100 points
This rewards
impact, not just quantity.
It also discourages users from farming easy reports.
A reputation system like this could even decay over time so older contributions matter less than recent accuracy.
2. Delayed Accuracy ScoringOne problem on forums is moderators are not always consistent.
A smarter system could:
- track whether later moderator reversals occurred,
- whether admins later banned the user,
- or whether multiple moderators independently agreed.
This reduces:
- moderator bias,
- inconsistent rule interpretation,
- and “luck” depending on who handled the report.
3. Evidence Quality ScoringCurrently, many reports are just:
“spam”
A much stronger system would reward:
- links,
- archive references,
- plagiarism proof,
- behavioral patterns,
- alt-account correlation,
- transaction evidence,
- or timeline documentation.
This would favor investigative work rather than simple button-click reporting.
Bitcointalk especially has a culture where detailed evidence matters heavily, particularly in Scam Accusations and Reputation sections.
4. Community Validation LayerInstead of moderators alone determining “good” or “bad,” trusted community reviewers could validate reports.
For example:
- moderators make the final action,
- but veteran reporters could endorse the quality of reports,
- similar to peer review.
This distributes trust somewhat more decentralizationally.
The downside:
- clique formation,
- retaliation,
- popularity bias,
- and politics.
Bitcointalk historically struggles with those issues already in areas like DefaultTrust debates.
5. Incentive Tokens / Merit-Style RewardsBitcointalk could theoretically reward valuable moderation assistance similarly to how Merit rewards valuable posts.
Examples:
- periodic recognition,
- special badges,
- moderator nomination pathways,
- temporary perks,
- or even forum privileges.
The danger is obvious:
- users start reporting for rewards instead of quality,
- competitive behavior emerges,
- mass-report abuse,
- or targeted harassment through reporting campaigns.
Any direct financial reward system would almost certainly become gamed quickly.
6. Transparency Metrics Instead of PercentagesA raw “98% good” stat actually hides important information.
A more useful profile might show:
- spam reports,
- plagiarism catches,
- scam investigations,
- moderator reversals,
- average response time,
- confirmed bans resulting from reports,
- unique reports vs duplicate reports.
This paints a fuller picture of contribution quality.
7. Anti-Gaming MechanismsAny advanced system would need protections against:
- report brigading,
- retaliatory reporting,
- report farming,
- moderator favoritism,
- and social alliances.
Bitcointalk’s simplicity is partially intentional because simple systems are harder to exploit at scale.
That’s one reason the current system has survived so long despite its flaws.
The Bigger Philosophical IssueBitcointalk historically leans toward:
- minimal structure,
- minimal automation,
- moderator discretion,
- and social reputation systems rather than algorithmic governance.
So even if technically better systems exist, they may conflict with the forum’s culture.
The forum often prefers:
- imperfect human judgment,
- decentralized social interpretation,
- and visible reputation battles
over highly engineered systems.
That’s also why debates around moderation, Trust, flags, and reporting never fully disappear there.
A Hybrid System Would Probably Work BestA strong modernized approach might combine:
| Component | Purpose |
| Accuracy % | baseline reliability |
| Weighted severity | reward meaningful reports |
| Evidence scoring | reward investigative effort |
| Time decay | prevent ancient stats dominating |
| Moderator agreement consistency | reduce bias |
| Public transparency categories | clearer contribution history |
| Anti-abuse heuristics | stop farming/manipulation |
That would likely produce better incentives than a simple “good/bad percentage” while still remaining understandable to users.