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Wyatt Carss shared an idea in Twitter on July 18, 2009 11:42:
Plan to automate spammer/robot removalI bet it has been said before (found a similar but longer/less focused comment at http://getsatisfaction.com/twitter/to...) -- I'm taking this idea from one proposed for reddit.
If there were a button or control available on user B's account page that allowed user A to indicate that they suspect user B is a bot/spammer/follow-scammer, it could be used to automatically flag these accounts as suspicious, or even automatically disable them.
I have had at least 15 fake accounts follow me (out of 50 followers), and I always wish that there was something I could do to indicate that I'm blocking them because _they're bad_, not just because I don't like them. This could also help to reduce the load on the spammer team, if it were built into an automated disabling process.
But everyone always wants a feature; I know you guys are swamped. Good luck with all of the attacks - you don't deserve the slop being thrown at you.
Wyatt Carss shared an idea in Songza on July 29, 2008 22:29:
Treat search results as a playlistThis is just an idea - an easy to implement, powerful idea.
On a competing online music player, searching "The Who" for example will return several results for The Who, just as Songza does. If I then play a song by The Who, when it finishes, a random other song from the results will immediately begin playing.
This is brilliant.
I did not realize that my key gripe (I didn't realize I had a gripe!) with Songza was that I had to return to it every 4-5 minutes to choose a new song, or painstakingly build a playlist.
By treating search results as a playlist, you take a substantial weight off of the user, and allow them to simply arrive, search, play, and enjoy. I have begun primarily using the competitor because of this feature alone - despite their horrible interface, their lack of selection, and annoying popup advertisements.
Even if it weren't the default operation, but could be enabled, I could joyfully return to using Songza. I love the service to the point that I rarely listen to the music I have downloaded over the past several years - but the ability to immediately throw up a list of songs and just leave them playing is paramount in usability of a music service.
Thank you for reading, if you have. I hope Songza continues to grow! (I didn't see this come up as a suggestion anywhere else, if it has, I'd love to find out how that went.)
-Wyatt Carss
University of Guelph, Ontario
Computer Science Department
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