A thought about the constraints of debtlessness in online communities

I notice that there’s a lot of work done in online communities that’s hard to price. We know so little about its price that it’s a bit ambiguous as to whether it should be paid for or charged for:

  • Is writing posts a duty or a privilege? You get to put anything you want in them, but not really, because it has to be something people want to read, and you’re competing with so many other options so it’s tough.

  • Is curating articles a duty or a privilege? If you’re a prominent curator, writers will essentially be writing for your tastes. On the other hand, you’re going to have to read a lot of not-yet-curated articles. And again, you have to operate within the bounds of what others want and competition with other curators is intense.

  • Is consuming curated articles a duty or a privilege? It’s definitely supposed to be a gift. But you find yourself reading a lot of news that stresses you out, as an intermediate goal towards later writing your own takes about it and competing in the producer arena.

  • Is moderating a duty or a privilege? On the one hand, you have the highest form of power over your community. On the other, the community is mad at you, and can leave, and mostly can’t really be herded.

Reflecting on this, I think it might not be a coincidence that all of the most common roles in online communities have equal or greater benefits than costs: We don’t have ways of compensating an imbalance. There’s no process for tracking and repaying debt (and even with better technologies, crediting the production of information — a non-excludable good — will remain difficult), which explains why it would be the case that:

It seems as if little is done, in an online community, unless it’s from the narrow category of acts that are in themselves self-compensating.

Which is concerning, because most conceivable beneficial exchanges pair acts which are not in that category.