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Steemit started as a blogging site with the intent of developing a system where the highest quality content, as decided by the community, was sent to the trending page. Obviously, this is not what happened.
Before going any further, we should not hold this as a mark against Steemit or the original developers. This is very common. Projects often evolve in ways different from what they were originally intended. This is usually neither good nor bad, just different. What occurred on STEEM follows that same path. Things are just different than was initially imagined.
I posted earlier in the week about it being time to drop the idea of quality in the name of success. This stance was taken essentially because I do not view STEEM as a blogging blockchain. While that might have been the original intent, the newer applications are now moving things away from that end. This means that there will be a lot of people joining this blockchain via the applications that have nothing to do with quality posting. Instead, people will be engaging in things that interest them.
@personz wrote an excellent article yesterday dealing with some of the issues I brought up in my post. This article took the discussion to a deeper level.
One thing that caught my attention was this:
But the real bugbear for me is the claiming that writing and reading high quality articles is elitist. Immediately this accusation smacks of the kind of anti-intellectualism that has gained currency in a world of highly processed media.
I am not sure if this was aimed at what I wrote but nowhere did I claim that writing and reading quality articles is elitist. What is elitist is expecting people to post quality articles. In fact, it is elitist to believe people should post articles to begin with.
This was in my post:
Does this mean serious bloggers/vloggers should drop their standards? Of course not. Nor does it mean that people who are looking for serious content on particular subject should abandon those who are posting content that meets their standards.
Contrary to the idea of claiming quality is elitist, I support the idea of people holding their standards. People who are interested in certain topics, whether it is writing or reading, should be free to pursue that. Of course, the flip side is also true.
Here is the crux of the problem. STEEM is not about blogging. The reward system is based upon content which takes on many forms. Certainly, blogs/vlogs are a part of that. Yet the blockchain is open to any application that one wants to put on here.
So does that mean blogging is dead? I certainly hope not since that is my primary preference on here. The difference is blogging is going to be relegated to blogging apps. Over time, we will most likely see specific applications designed for that purpose. I guess we could say that Steemit was designed for that purpose. However, the fact that every application posted on Steemit means that it took on more than that.
That said, I figure there will be blogging-only applications. @personz wrote this:
I'm currently developing a project called Gleeming. I'm not sure exactly what it's going to be yet, but some kind of magazine. My focus is on:
- Bold and attractive presentation
- Externally facing (i.e. not the Steem in-crowd) packaging
- Archiving the best older posts of Steem
- Soliciting great writing
- Renewed support for authors (evergreen) without hacks
I strongly believe that casual high quality blogging on Steem is coming to an end in it's current formation, it's time to do something about that ourselves.
I agree with this 1000%. In fact, I not only agree with the sentiment but the project. I do believe that STEEM needs an application that provides bloggers a place to do some top-notch blogging. It is still a rather large market that should not be overlooked.
Once again, we come to the place of Steemit versus STEEM. Steemit is not STEEM. Being the flagship application, it was the first one on here. Sadly, it is also woefully out of date and overlooked. Perhaps it can be revived to produce the blogging content on this blockchain. Or, just maybe, it will be another application that emerges which focuses upon filling this void for Steemians.
STEEM, on the other hand, is home for whatever people want to place on here. We see a variety of applications appearing with more to come. Many of these will not focus upon content that many will claim is quality. In fact, the point of my other post, is that most of the content that will appear would never thought of in the mindset of quality. Most of what is done on the Internet is not undertaken with that in mind.
Therefore, I do not believe that accepting the fact that most of the activity on the Internet is based upon interest and fun as opposed to quality is detrimental or degrading in any way. I also do not believe this view elitist. Simply look at the numbers. The blogging sites are seriously outnumbered in terms of users by the likes of Facebook, Reddit, Instagram, and Pinterest.
@personz brings up an excellent point about value versus quality. Here is how it was summed up:
Value is fundamental to the Steem blockchain, whereas Quality is a function of the interface.
Everyone should bring value to the STEEM blockchain. Content is the currency that will add value. Whatever is posted will enhance the blockchain. Whether it is quality or not, that depends upon what the applications bring to the table AND what the users prefer. For some, it will be high-end photography while others like links ala Reddit.
Be sure to check out the entire @personz article.
https://steemit.com/steem/@personz/in-defense-of-finding-value-on-steem
If you found this article informative, please give it an upvote and resteem.
When steemit.com becomes a place for us to manage our profiles while apps serve the function of interacting with the blockchain, I will surely be on the blogging app of choice, that is what I enjoy the most here, casual but crafted blogs with passion behind them.
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I agree. I would like more possibility in the future to customize the blog a little and personalize the layout, pin some posts etc.
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Customization would be nice but mostly I just want to filter out all the other random shit when I browse, at least when I’m in the mood for reading stuff, then I’ll log on to dsound or dtube when I’m in the mood for that.
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yep, that would be nice.
Perhaps a customisable integrated interface?
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Yes, that seems to be one of the issues - at present everything is posted on our blog without the opportunity to discriminate which audience we would like to target. On one hand, we risk alienating regular supporters, often from the blogging world, on the other, we are limited in seeking new audiences.
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This is why I think steemit.com will fade away as apps grow, that’ll be fine though.
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Steem blockchain will transform into a room of specific niches and everyone will find what they like!
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Some of us may wish to cross boundaries and not be confined to only one or niches.
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I have to totally agree with you on this :)
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We in one niche of steemit have established our community-member bot and to become a member requires a certain standard. As most members post daily it is hard to keep up the quality but we see no real shit posts.Thx.
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i’d rather not see titles like ‘is ... dead’ or ‘the end of .....’ then to discover that the article negates the title. I would rather see like ‘the fortunes of blogging’ etc etc followed by the artice to re-enforce the title, just because we have enough of negativity and we are a bit tired of that imho, you get my drift certainly, some people dont read farther than the title you know
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I agree, it would be good to have a 'Medium-esque' dapp here on steem for the more considered and in depth blogging articles.
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It's interesting to see the platform evolve.
I definitely agree that a dedicated blogging platform would be a life-saver. That's what I came here to do and I'd rather read thoughtful, long-form articles. I don't have the patience for video and I'm rarely in a place where it's appropriate to play sound. But it's been getting harder and harder to curate my feed to what was the original vision for Steemit.
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I think STEEM can facilitate the creation of a portal to a decentralized hub or portal to a world of content consumption where Dapps create their SMT for adding value to the ecosystem. We will be both the creators and consumera of the ecosystem whereas tokens are distributed to where value is in more demand. In a world like that, there will be room for everything from games to other media mediums like blogging.
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The original idea of the platform kinda failed, but in my opinion the foundations are here and the future is bright.
Blogging on Steemit is very alive, but is seems to be a certain thing that eventually, at same point, it will end, considering the route this blockchain is taking. Which means new opportunities for a new type of people...
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I like what is going on here on the steem blockchain the freedom for diversification where one can find what he or she likes and partake in it without being constrained to a particular standard.
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Hi @taskmaster4450!
Your post was upvoted by @steem-ua, new Steem dApp, using UserAuthority for algorithmic post curation!
Your UA account score is currently 5.525 which ranks you at #517 across all Steem accounts.
Your rank has improved 2 places in the last three days (old rank 519).
In our last Algorithmic Curation Round, consisting of 499 contributions, your post is ranked at #20.
Evaluation of your UA score:
Feel free to join our @steem-ua Discord server
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I sorely crave a platform for both consuming and sharing content concerning both awareness of the underlying principles as well as the implementation of mechanisms contributing to the quality of life in general. Applications filtering content to this effect are more than welcome!
My steam for Steem is busy recovering and I look forward to making use of the positive filters mentioned here!
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No... Blogging will live forever.
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