For example, people on Reddit asking redundant questions and give equally redundant or unhelpful answers.

Whenever every ‘What’s the worst show you’ve seen?’ is asked, you’ll get 10,000 “Kardashians” answers, which is just easy karma farming.

If someone posts in a community that’s geared for something like opinions, but someone elects to just go on a full scale rant instead.

  • @Foam3477@lemmy.world
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    331 year ago

    There’s two kinds of resposting:

    “honest” resposting that happens when the OP hasn’t seen his submission previously posted.

    karma-whore resposting that happens when someone wants to get those sweet internet points.

    Without karma the second one may not be a problem at all ¯\(ツ)

    • @nyternic@lemmy.worldOP
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      91 year ago

      I’ve gotten pegged by people when I reposted something I knew very well, hadn’t been posted within a year’s timeframe. Like, what’s the problem with that? It hasn’t been seen in so long so yeah it’ll be reposted.

      Unlike with your second scenario, I’ve seen posts crop up within the same day and they’re all gratified and praised like as if people hadn’t seen them before when their short attention spans fail to tell them that they did see it before very recently.

      • @illi@lemm.ee
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        31 year ago

        Could’ve been different people. This happened all the time with me seeing something for the first time in my life, while comments were full of complaints of it being reposted once a week.

    • magic_lobster_party
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      31 year ago

      Karma-whoring is especially bad when it’s just all bots doing it. There were many instances where even comments on karma posts were bot generated. Upvotes were much likely bot generated too.

      Destroys the human element.