People are going to be performing such evaluations on some basis or another. You're objecting to the basic human instinct to socially order communities. If Likes are hidden, it will be by post count or whoever posts with the biggest, longest posts with biggest longest words, or whoever says the nicest things, or whoever gets away with the most bullying.RobertJasiek wrote: Many users will see the numbers and, since they are stated below every user name at every message, naively believe in a great importance of values shown with such omnipresence and believe in linear comparison meaning of every two numbers: They assume that 10 Was Liked is as bad as one tenth of 100 Was Liked.
You will never get people to align their social order precisely with the objective value of contributions provided. As inaccurate as the gratitude system is, at least it represents a conglomerate opinion of what the community tends to like in its posts. I think that is more likely to align with actual value, especially in a forum with a userbase like ours (read: generally rationalist in bias, generally intelligent) than the other criteria that would inevitably take its place.
And hey, if it doesn't align broadly with posts that are actually valuable contributions then there is little hope the community is going to actually appreciate or respond to real value, right? Getting rid of the Gratitude system won't change that.