Meta shadow575 Posted July 28, 2004 Meta Posted July 28, 2004 Is there a FIFO system in place for reviewing submitted sites? No there is no FIFO system. Editors review sites in the order they choose. Essentially sites are reviewed in a random order by the editor of the category to which it is submitted. That is why the time it takes for a particular site to be reviewed can take anywhere from a couple of hours to a couple of years. For more information, check out the FAQ page will help to explain the process. Shadow *The opinions I offer are my own and may not represent the opinions of Curlie.org or other editors.* It can take anywhere from two hours to several years for a site review to take place. I do not respond to private messages requesting site status checks. _______________________________________________ https://shadow575.wordpress.com/
Meta hutcheson Posted July 28, 2004 Meta Posted July 28, 2004 >Why not just post the website if it's legit and let visitors have the choice to go the website? Well, that's what we do. The editor review determines legitimacy. If you want that same action, but with legitimacy determined by webmaster desire instead, then that would be what we call a free-for-all-link-farm. And there are many such websites out there: you're welcome to avail yourself of their services. We don't need to compete with them; we've got enough to do pursuing our own goal. (The FFALFs can seed with our data if they want.) >You should suggest to also add "so long as the backup does not exceed 10% or a new opening for editor should be added". That doesn't parse. And insofar as it makes sense, it, expresses several severe misapprehensions about the ODP: (1) there IS no such thing as an editor "opening" -- all categories can be edited by multiple editors: and we start dozens of new categories daily. If someone shows they can make a contribution to category X (for sufficiently small categories), then we're happy to have their help. (2) the submittal backlog is simply not a relevant datum when considering whether a category is comprehensive. (3) but: a high submittal backlog is an indication that a new editor SHOULDN'T be dropped into the category: that category, considered as a project, is by definition too large for a new editor. Insofar as we consider the backlog, we already have the exact opposite of your proposal in place. >What about the red marks next to sites that I've read about on other boards? As much misinformation as you've absorbed, and as incredible as some of it is, no telling what you've heard on other boards. We do try to track spam. We do try to track editor actions. The combination of those two means that sites build reputations based on their submittal activities. But any action by an editor can be undone by another; and no editor can force another editor to act, or prevent another editor from acting. (The most that can happen is that if the meta-editors agree an editor is abusing, that editor can be removed and their abusive edits undone.) >Well, if there was some type of process in place, maybe I could work out the arithmetic. A first come first served methodology might seem like a good starting point. That way, I could understand the lead times and have an expection. But the results show a completely random process. Exactly. So you cannot predict the lead time. You can expect some sites to be reviewed within minutes (as I did for about a dozen sites yesterday) and others to wait for months. (Don't tell me you didn't see that pattern in your forum reading!) And if you can't predict the lead time, there's logically no point at which you should start entertaining paranoiac fantasies about being blacklisted. This isn't rocket science. >If a category is getting to large, break it up into further sub-categories. Duh. >It seems to me though, as you stated above that once a category gets large enough, it doesn't get the attention "if big enough to already keep the user busy", that any new submissions are just overflow and will never, ever, get looked at. What I actually stated was that the odds get lower. I didn't and wouldn't say "never". What tends to happen is that a team of editors is organized to tackle large problem areas (which large backlogs sometimes indicate). So everything happens at once. We do subcategorize when we can identify how. Sometimes, though, webmasters simply don't provide enough unique information about themselves to permit any kind of objective categorization -- which tells editors we would do better to focus on areas where we can find genuinely unique sites. For example: online music sales or web development services. What is the value to SURFERS of adding another site to either one? Low, vanishingly small: in fact, they can almost certainly find what they want just as well without one more listing as with it. Would subcategorization change that fundamental fact? Of course it will not. What COULD change things? Only this: proprietors must be able to identify what is unique about their business, and to find out how to reflect that in the ODP taxonomy. Suppose there is nothing unique about their products or services? Then the world can get along fine without them, and so can the ODP. Nothing we do can change that fundamental fact.
Spin-Zero Posted July 28, 2004 Posted July 28, 2004 Thanks, Mate! Good information. I'm basically a noob here, so I'm just trying to better understand the whole process, and help if needed.
matt1234 Posted July 28, 2004 Author Posted July 28, 2004 Exactly. So you cannot predict the lead time. You can expect some sites to be reviewed within minutes (as I did for about a dozen sites yesterday) and others to wait for months. (Don't tell me you didn't see that pattern in your forum reading!) And if you can't predict the lead time, there's logically no point at which you should start entertaining paranoiac fantasies about being blacklisted. This isn't rocket science. There you go, keep everyone in suspense of what YOU are going to accept or reject or when you're going to either. Maybe we should start referring to all editors as "Dear God". All in the name of preventing obnoxious webmasters from even beginning to have a reason to complain, read constructive criticism if your feeling optimistic. When was the last time you tried to bootstrap a website? Do you have any idea how difficult it is? These are not the days of "here's a couple million, go get some eyeballs" but rather "build it to a million visitors a month and maybe we'll talk to you". Ever think that maybe the webmasters that are bitching the most about this happen to have the most legitimate websites available and are working 100 times harder than others to improve them? Maybe the fact that DMOZ gets funded by so many millions that there is little incentive to make things better or give much of an effort to help those that don't have those millions to throw around. I'd bet that this very issue that I'm continually ranting about is the number one problem people have with DMOZ. So, if it's such a problem, why not do something about it? Are people at DMOZ this shortsighted to not see that if it is this big a problem today that, duh, it will be twice a big a year from now, 10 times as big five years from now? What's the breaking point? How many websites does it take to have on the backburner that it just becomes too hot to touch?
Meta hutcheson Posted July 29, 2004 Meta Posted July 29, 2004 Is there nothing in your concept of Polity between your slave and your deity? Editors are autonomous humans who volunteer to do what they consider important. That's all. And that's enough. You're still confused about what the ODP is. It's not a website promotion service! And we don't want it to be. There are thousands, probably millions of sites that will help you bootstrap your site. The ODP has a different mission, and there is nobody else who shares it -- there are only a handful of sites at all similar. If you are looking to the ODP to provide you millions of eyeballs, I can guarantee that you will be disappointed. It's never done that for anyone else, and it can't do it for you. In fact, there's nothing we'd do for you that we wouldn't just as happily do for any of your competitors. And -- webmasters aren't our customers. Surfers are our customers, and we want to hear from them. Webmasters are actually our potential suppliers, and -- it's probably futile to hope they'd listen to us. But most of them don't. That's OK. It's a big web, and there's room for a lot of little guys. You can start off on your own, or you can find a dozen likeminded friends and work with them, or join a few thousand people on something really big. Take your pick. We won't stop you. We won't stomp on your face. And the problem you mention, that so obsesses you, is simply not a problem at all to our customers. And so, among all our real problems, yours is simply not on our list -- which doesn't mean we'll try to abuse you for going somewhere else to fix it. That's your privilege. Ours is to try to fix our problems -- and we have enough of them!
matt1234 Posted July 29, 2004 Author Posted July 29, 2004 I appreciate your detailed responses. They have helped me to understand what DMOZ is about. You could have simply ignored my rants but you didn't, thanks for the feedback. I'm sure that your volunteer efforts go largely unappreciated, well, it is because of the usefullness of the directory that I see such a value in it, and would like to be a part of it any way I can. I tried to be an editor to help out as I'm always seeing new websites from different businesses and organizations desparately trying to promote renewable energy and sustainability in their location that inclusion in this directory might help them out. I was declined for some reason. I still thought there were many different ways to categorize the industry to make it as unique as it really is and created a directory on the Odysen website to try to reflect that. Being included in DMOZ would another way to help this cause but that is out of my hands and is completely in yours, or whomever the appropriate editor is. It would be great to be considered a value added addition to the directory and again I appreciate all of your responses.
flicker Posted July 29, 2004 Posted July 29, 2004 >I was declined for some reason. I don't know the details of your application and this wouldn't be the place to comment on them if I did... but I do notice that the category you're talking about has more than 600 sites in it (if you count all its subcategories, which we do). That's way too large and broad a category for *any* brand-new editor. In general, we expect new editors to start with a small category and work up to larger ones as they learn the ropes. HTH...
matt1234 Posted July 30, 2004 Author Posted July 30, 2004 Yes, and they've barely been touched for at least the last year. There are so many more ways to break that up than what they've done. It's out of date, never gets updated, and I wonder why I got so upset about it in the first place. Trying to talk to these editors here about it is useless too. Why do they even have a board if this is the kind of crap you get if you bother posting. webmaster: "ahhh, I submitted my website two years go, what's the status?" dmoz: "it's still pending, check back in six months." webmaster: "ok." six months later..... webmaster: "any change?" dmoz: "nope, still pending, check back in six months." webmaster: "this sucks." dmoz: "Read the rules. We do not volunteer our very valuable time to competely serve stupid dumbass webmasters. Just because you submit a website doesn't mean anything. We are so much above any typical directories that do that kind of thing. We will enter whatever website we want, submitting your website means nothing." webmaster: "ok, that sounds really neat, can I become an editor for a really screwed up section that's completely out of date." dmoz: "Read the rules. And the answer is no, for unspecified reasons. Actually the reason is probably, but not completely, because there are too many websites in the category you selected and you are too stupid to be able handle it. Our editors of many years of experience can't even handle it, as I'm sure you've noticed. So why do you think you're so superior to be able to handle it?" webmaster: "you suck" dmoz: "no, it is you that suck. it says so our manual." webmaster: "you have a manual that tells you that webmasters suck?" dmoz: "well, not actually. we really don't have rules for anything. it is my own personal rulebook I just made up. I showed it to some fellow editors and they like it so much they all made copies, so now its the master rulebook I guess. It's easy to remember too. It has one rule and the rule is "webmasters suck." webmaster: "Thanks for all the help, you guys are brilliant!"
Meta hutcheson Posted July 30, 2004 Meta Posted July 30, 2004 matt, we're not saying we couldn't use help. We're saying start with a focus. Pick a LITTLE neglected category (20 sites or so.) Double its size. Let us look at your work. If we like it, we'll want more -- take on another little category. If you like doing this sort of thing, a month down the road you could be wading through 1000 submittals (3/4 of them misplaced, and many of them spam) in that formerly-neglected formerly-600-site category.
matt1234 Posted July 30, 2004 Author Posted July 30, 2004 Done. I picked one with a whopping five listings. There should be at least 500 in the category I chose.
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