Don't hate the Bots, they are an important part of the Steemit Ecosystem and are growing to be even more important. Below is a list of Bots that currenctly exist in the Steemit ecosystem, as more are produced I will add them to the list. And over the next year or two I plan on starting some form of loosely Organized Steemit Bot Making Society, where everyone just shares ideas and shares their bots for download. And eventually Bots can be a normal part of the Steemit Ecosystem, instead of a new Species that people are worried about.
1.
Everyone knows about the Wang Bot right? The Bot that greets you in the 'introduceyourself' tag. It has made over $1,000,000 estimated value in STEEM Power.
https://steemit.com/@wang/transfers
I assume @wang was created by @ned or @dan or someone at @steemit
2.
This is a bot that newer Steemit users can appreciate. It was created by 1 person who owns 3 Whale accounts:
https://steemit.com/curation/@steemed/im-a-steem-whale-looking-for-writers
One month ago, when there were about 200-400 posts a day, he said he was having trouble keeping up with all the good content, so he had to make a Bot that could do some work for him. There are now nearly 8,000 posts per day, which is 0ver 16x as much content as there was a month ago. This is a bot that is meant to do good.
Here is a blog by @cryptoctopus about the job of a Witness is
And here is a blog by @dantheman basically saying that Whales sould vote for anything with any value, not just for the very best content.
https://steemit.com/steem/@dantheman/steem-whales-voting-perspective
3.
This is a Curation Bot, called @Curator
https://steemit.com/steem/@curator/i-made-a-curation-bot-for-steem
This bot takes as much information as possible, without actually reading your content (since it's a robot), then makes a vote determined on the information gathered. Bots like this could be used by the casual Steemit user who doesn't have more than a few hours a week to dedicate to Steemit, but wants to remain active. Or a Whale who wants their vote attached to as many good blogs as possible, without just following specific blogs that they have already heard of. Eventually Bots like @Curator will also be used like Search Engine Web Crawlers to produce data for Websites based around Steemit.
4.
There is also an Anti-Plagiarism bot called @Cheetah
https://steemit.com/steemit/@anyx/cheetah-bot-the-fight-against-spam-and-plagiarism-continues
It flags Plagiarized content. It was created by @anyx and he also gives credit to
5.
This is a bot that helps a Witness keep everything moving by alerting them of different things and giving them analytics.
Created by @bitcube
6.
This Bot posts to Twitter
Created by @derekareith credit also given to @xeroc
7.
Upvote Bot that anyone can use
https://steemit.com/steem/@complexring/steem-autovote-bot
Created by @complexring
Conclusion
Think of Bots as the kind of animal in the ecosystem that cleans the algea away, or creates compost, etc. They can help make the Steemit Ecosystem both better in content and better in wealth distribution.
Here is an Archive of Cryptocurrency App building Code on Github for anyone creating a Steemit app, it could also be useful in the creation of Bots
https://steemit.com/steem/@marsresident/github-cryptocurrency-app-creation-archive
Python Library
https://steemit.com/steem/@xeroc/python-steem-v0-1-1
Java Script Library
You may want to extend the tools by
piston
from http://piston.rocksIt allows to write a bot in about 10 lines of code
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Hey! I just want to point out that cheetah does not "flag" if it detects content, it only suggests a potential source.
Also note that I give credit to those folks for being awesome and helping out with flagging, tools, and such. So far, cheetah is all me -- but I'm hoping to get some collaboration soon! :)
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Hi @anyx, how can I get involved with helping flag? I notice a lot of plagiarized content in #travel and would like to help out.
Thanks.
@msutyler
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Oh, sorry about that. I have only seen it once, and I thought I saw it flag someone like 6 times. Maybe it was another bot, but I thought I saw like cheetah1, cheetah2, cheetah3, cheetah4, etc. all go flag one person and he was saying that the content he posted was his, and cheetah (or whatever Bot I saw) was telling him that it was a robot, and that if he thought it was making a mistake to go to that thread or the Steemit Slack.
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There are some known bots/spammers that get downvotes on posts until they stop doing it, but this is manually defined (not part of the plagiarism stuff)
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That makes sense. I just thought that because I saw that happening then.
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bots will go to war and with a little help the useless scam bots will lose. looking at you @weenis
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bot? rlly?
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Maybe this explains the rush to hard fork in order to stop this kind of behavior? Rumor is they are about to rate limit posts. I don't mind the bots myself and if wang is able to generate a million dollars then great for wang.
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Comment Bots aren't really useful. Except @cheetah. @cheetah is just letting people know that their content is also somewhere else. A Bot like @weenis just posts random gifs and memes, and they aren't even accurate most of the time, and it posts weird stuff. A Curation Bot, or a Introduce Yourself Bot, or a Warning you of Plagiarism Bot, or a AutoVote the Blogs you follow Bot, are all things that can be useful. A Bot that leaves random comments does nothing for anyone.
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I was thinking of creating my own bot.
These informations will be useful.
Thanks fot sharing!
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Is it possible that bots could be somehow regulated? Or is that a dumb question? I love helpful bots like @cheetah
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Great! Thanks for sharing, really want to get into coding.
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