That's fair. 
Moderating a sight can get to be a lot of work.

...although, at the point at which you have so much externally contributed 
content that the task of moderating the site becomes a big burden, the site 
is almost by definition a big success. The current website doesn't generate 
a lot of comments or article contribution so this problem doesn't exist. 
The bigger problem of not so great website exists, instead.

The way I see it is this... to be a good site, the site needs to have a lot 
of fresh and quality content. If you write all that content yourself, you 
have a lot of work to do all the time, because the content always needs to 
be updating. If your visitors write some of that content for you, you have 
somewhat less work, but you also have somewhat different work. But again, 
what makes the site good is quantity of material (and quality, but quality 
comes from quantity).

We don't get site traffic until the site is good.

...so step 1 is write a lot of good content.
...step 2 is let other people augment that content.

...repeat and edit as necessary.

 

On Friday, October 2, 2015 at 5:58:47 PM UTC-7, Daniel Beck wrote:
>
>
> On 02.10.2015, at 20:17, Kohsuke Kawaguchi <[email protected] <javascript:>> 
> wrote: 
>
> > My key take away is that we can drive participation more by encouraging 
> people to sign up and create an account, which converts them from anonymous 
> drive-by visitors into a "card carrying member of the Jenkins community", 
> which makes a lot of sense. 
>
> It's definitely in interesting concept. 
>
> The major problem I see with this is the need for moderation when everyone 
> is allowed to post everywhere. And that doesn't even consider the manual 
> work needed to correlate the work of numerous individual contributors as 
> mentioned at the bottom. This requires that the moderator tools are 
> exceptionally strong to not take up a lot of time. 
>
> One other issue that concerns me is that the vision requires a lot of 
> participation to take off. Maybe I'm too pessimistic here, but I see a 
> similar situation like those small business web sites with a section called 
> 'special offers' or 'news' that is never updated. It just looks sad if e.g. 
> you can vote on things in a list, and nothing has been voted on. A site 
> should grow towards the described level of participation rather than go 
> from basically nothing to that level. What do others think? 
>
>

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