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It's all about sharing knowledge and code with other individuals, not about allowing other sites to simply scarpe off the code and call it their own, which happens with increaing reularity.
".45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly" - JSOP, 2010 ----- You can never have too much ammo - unless you're swimming, or on fire. - JSOP, 2010 ----- "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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I'm not in favor of other sites copying CodeProject material, even when it is freely available, if that would result in CP being less successful or even at risk; and I know CP has been sending letters and taking legal action against sites that try to steal its content.
If some technical measures have to be taken, I suggest CP comes up with something less intrusive for the normal members. Here is my initial suggestion: If a user has hardly any reputation points, and is trying to download an item less than a minute after a previous download, then that one could be CAPTCHA-protected.
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles] Nil Volentibus Arduum
Please use <PRE> tags for code snippets, they preserve indentation, improve readability, and make me actually look at the code.
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Probably a task running through the log files. For the existing download counts.
BTW the download counts are not for all-time it seems. They don't seem to have logs for the early years
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Nishant Sivakumar wrote: Probably a task running through the log files. Yes, I think you are right. A new download keeps popping up every 5 minutes or so.
Nishant Sivakumar wrote: They don't seem to have logs for the early years Is that bit from the latest issue of The Insider's Insider?
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Nishant Sivakumar wrote: Probably a task running through the log files.
And what has this got to do with the fact that so many articles are being downloaded in a short amount of time? Like I stated, I don't know *what* articles are being downloaded because the rep history doesn't specify that (as I think it should).
".45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly" - JSOP, 2010 ----- You can never have too much ammo - unless you're swimming, or on fire. - JSOP, 2010 ----- "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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John Simmons / outlaw programmer wrote: And what has this got to do with the fact that so many articles are being
downloaded in a short amount of time? Like I stated, I don't know *what*
articles are being downloaded because the rep history doesn't specify that (as I
think it should).
Chris has corrected me already but my initial assumption was that a task runs through the log files and for every download in the log, it inserts a rep entry (inefficient as it sounds, it seemed to me to be an accuracy measure). But anyway that was not it.
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I believe they are retrospective points (they probably have a background task going through the old log files).
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It's simply a reflection of your article - people actually download the files. Crazy, I know
No retrospective points have been awarded yet. When we do award them you'll get a nice boost.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Chris Maunder wrote: When we do award them you'll get a nice boost.
Does that mean the articles like the ToDo list that have 112,333 downloads recorded at this time, will see rep boostsa of over 560,000 points?
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DaveAuld wrote: Does that mean the articles like the ToDo list that have 112,333 downloads
recorded at this time, will see rep boostsa of over 560,000 points?
If so, well deserved one I'd think
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I'm not saying they don't deserve this, I'm just looking forward to the massive shuffle its going to cause on the league tables!
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Yeah it will be interesting, the shuffle at the top!
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i just did a quick check, and the Todo list points would put them ahead of CG even taking ALL of CG's downloads into account.
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Yeah, kinda expected that!
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Chris Maunder wrote: No retrospective points have been awarded yet.
Ah, thanks!
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Thanks for the info I mean.
The retrospective points will be interesting!
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Chris Maunder wrote: When we do award them you'll get a nice boost.
I just did a quick check. Sneaky way for you to be #1, huh Chris?
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Gawd, I hope not...
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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My eyeball count was ~209k downloads for your articles. That's over 1m points. Neither Nish, nor Sacha, nor JSOP, nor .dan.g. (todo list) can match that, only dan g appears to even come close. Someone else might, but I don't have time to troll cp vanity for all the people who huge article counts to see what their download levels look like.
3x12=36
2x12=24
1x12=12
0x12=18
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My downloads are right at 9600 by my last count (minus about 130 for the last few days). That would be 48,000 points. I really think 5 points per download is too much, and should be adjusted to 1 point per THOUSAND downloads.
".45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly" - JSOP, 2010 ----- You can never have too much ammo - unless you're swimming, or on fire. - JSOP, 2010 ----- "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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Ugh. Personally I find that crazy, though if someone like Sacha had been posting articles since 2000 then he'd be up at that level too. But it does show that points can get out of control.
One thing that has been suggested is expiring points. If we set a timeout of, say, 5 years, then that would put me back to a sensible level, at the risk of offending long time authors.
Or I could just reduce downloads to a single point.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Chris Maunder wrote: One thing that has been suggested is expiring points. If we set a timeout of, say, 5 years, then that would put me back to a sensible level, at the risk of offending long time authors.
Listing short term rep scores would be interesting as an adjunct to the current system but I wouldn't want to remove the lifetime scores.
Chris Maunder wrote: Or I could just reduce downloads to a single point.
Something like this strikes me as a much better idea. The problem as I see it is that comparing downloads to votes/CP bookmarkings is that you're comparing two very different things. Downloading an attachment doesn't require a user to do anything to explicitly indicate that they thought the article was useful (and it's quite possible that they ended up deciding the opposite), from the standpoint of CP this makes it a passive activity (similar to counting page views). Whereas voting (or bookmarking in CP) requires an active decision by the user to indicate that they think the article is praise worthy. There are also types of article that don't really lend themselves to having a download at all.
I'd suggest that if you decide to give rep points for passive activities, you score them so that the total number of passive points is at most comparable to the size of the total number of active points. As a user I don't think there're any way for me to compare the total number of author points given to the total number of article downloads. On the one hand your 80k author points vs 200k downloads makes me wonder if even one point per download is too high. OTOH, I think Nish and Jsop are closer to 1:1 on points to downloads, and on the gripping hand Sacha's articles have scored far more votes than they have downloads. On the whole though this mostly says a sample size of 4 is statistically useless. Time for you to parse through a decade of server logs to get some more useful aggregate stats.
3x12=36
2x12=24
1x12=12
0x12=18
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I think reducing it even further would be better.
100 downloads = 1 point
1000 views = 1 point
The reason I'm suggesting that is because while downloads and views indicate some level of interest from other users, it doesn't necessarily mean that much because a view/download doesn't mean they are actually using it, or even planning on using it. I see downloading and viewing to be akin to shrink-wrap licenses where you have to agree to something before even opening the product.
This would also keep the points from getting way out of hand all of a sudden.
".45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly" - JSOP, 2010 ----- You can never have too much ammo - unless you're swimming, or on fire. - JSOP, 2010 ----- "Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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