I'll use a personal example to RuneScape gold help explain more fully. Whenever I moderate a Clan Chat, the way I speak and act is dependant on the number of users in chat. Whenever there's only a small number of players in CC, I attempt to actively talk with players, have fun with them and be silly. However, when there's roughly 15-20 people in the chat, I automatically become a little more serious (still friendly) and don't become as private as normal. This is only because I need to moderate a Clan Chat that is more full and so are more likely to include some trolls. Dynamic filtering is there also.
In my opinion, Jagex has maintained the user-friendly policy far too long. When they change a policy, the neighborhood on which that policy is based will change as a consequence, and therefore a new policy is necessary. A policy (or even a filter, as I call it occasionally ) has to be more dynamic in order to be effective. In the event the sum of comments increases, Jagex needs to filter out more comments in order to only use the comments that's useful. This is where Jagex lacks.
There are just too many themes (of which a lot are crap ) for them to see. First thing, they should shut down the rants forum. Secondly, they ought to announce that they won't utilize opinions put from the Recent Updates forum, so that forum is dialogue only. Recent upgrades should come along with a topic in the Feedback forum, allowing players to give comments on the upgrades. In this topic, players may ask topics in order that they can discuss (or even rant about) things that, according to them, require changing. Any rants or opinions put in wrong forums to get Jagex' attention should just be hidden by Forum Mods. This is a massive filter that will help prevent the mass issue spam and enables Jagex to analyze the issues in the game that actually require attention.
Alright, so that is all fine, but how should Jagex have managed the Ice Strykewyrms issue? The answer to that question is that they should not have bothered with reading articles in topics in any way. They should have created a poll instead, allowing members to vote if there ought to be a compromise or not. While this is completed, they should filter the votes like a maniac. They Ought to be able to assess what specific groups voted, these groups being:
Members without 93 Slayer. Members with 93 Slayer and without a Fire cape. These groups could need some programming, but it certainly would be possible. Once a few thousand players had voted, they should have assessed the results and decided whether they ought to have left a compromise or not. This is the way it should have been. It's compulsory that Jagex, as a professional company, should review their policies and be sure they do filtering. They ought to set up a policy according to the current situation and change it every month or so. It's quite much required that they alter the policy they have now. Because currently, it's not the ones which are the most significant that get noticed, but OSRS buy gold the ones who shout the loudest: the whiners.
I'll use a personal example to RuneScape gold help explain more fully. Whenever I moderate a Clan Chat, the way I speak and act is dependant on the number of users in chat. Whenever there's only a small number of players in CC, I attempt to actively talk with players, have fun with them and be silly. However, when there's roughly 15-20 people in the chat, I automatically become a little more serious (still friendly) and don't become as private as normal. This is only because I need to moderate a Clan Chat that is more full and so are more likely to include some trolls. Dynamic filtering is there also.
In my opinion, Jagex has maintained the user-friendly policy far too long. When they change a policy, the neighborhood on which that policy is based will change as a consequence, and therefore a new policy is necessary. A policy (or even a filter, as I call it occasionally ) has to be more dynamic in order to be effective. In the event the sum of comments increases, Jagex needs to filter out more comments in order to only use the comments that's useful. This is where Jagex lacks.
There are just too many themes (of which a lot are crap ) for them to see. First thing, they should shut down the rants forum. Secondly, they ought to announce that they won't utilize opinions put from the Recent Updates forum, so that forum is dialogue only. Recent upgrades should come along with a topic in the Feedback forum, allowing players to give comments on the upgrades. In this topic, players may ask topics in order that they can discuss (or even rant about) things that, according to them, require changing. Any rants or opinions put in wrong forums to get Jagex' attention should just be hidden by Forum Mods. This is a massive filter that will help prevent the mass issue spam and enables Jagex to analyze the issues in the game that actually require attention.
Alright, so that is all fine, but how should Jagex have managed the Ice Strykewyrms issue? The answer to that question is that they should not have bothered with reading articles in topics in any way. They should have created a poll instead, allowing members to vote if there ought to be a compromise or not. While this is completed, they should filter the votes like a maniac. They Ought to be able to assess what specific groups voted, these groups being:
Members without 93 Slayer. Members with 93 Slayer and without a Fire cape. These groups could need some programming, but it certainly would be possible. Once a few thousand players had voted, they should have assessed the results and decided whether they ought to have left a compromise or not. This is the way it should have been. It's compulsory that Jagex, as a professional company, should review their policies and be sure they do filtering. They ought to set up a policy according to the current situation and change it every month or so. It's quite much required that they alter the policy they have now. Because currently, it's not the ones which are the most significant that get noticed, but OSRS buy gold the ones who shout the loudest: the whiners.