Crime Cases Still Using Cassettes
Technology21 mins ago
Recurrent Problem - Innocent web-surfer puts quiz question into Google and clicks the first link in the list. He arrives in the Answerbank. He notes down the answer, clicks "Most Recent" and sees a big box with "What is your question?" at the top. He doesn't notice the words " AB Suggestions" or the "Category Search" box and types in another twenty-five quiz questions, one at a time. Result: angry Answerbankers from Ayr to Adelaide. It's so easily done.
Possible Solution - (I hope) - When the surfer registers his user name he is taken to a screen with something like this:
Get the BEST from the Answerbank
1. Post your question in the right category (see the list in the left hand column). Your hard disc problem won't get solved in Food and Drink � your Quiz question won't find solutions in Body and Soul. Tour the site and see what fits in where.
2. Use Category Search (at the bottom of the left hand column). If your question has been answered already people may choose not to answer your duplicate. For Quizzes try both the question and the quiz name. If more than 20 threads come up you will need to click "Next 20" in the green bar at the bottom of the screen to reach the higher numbers.
3. If you have more than one question from the same Quiz, put them all in one posting. Give the question numbers to make it easier to post answers.
4. Don't swear; don't be rude. If you do we may ban you from the site.
5. Don't entirely trust the answers. You do not know how knowledgeable the answerer really is. Before taking irreversible action, run the ideas past your doctor/lawyer/Citizens' Advice Bureau. Check quiz answers in Google before sending in your entry.
6. Enjoy the Answerbank.
Might this work?
No best answer has yet been selected by Marsh. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Maybe if, after each paragraph, the surfer had to click [NEXT] and move to a new screen, it would help everything get read. I agree that faced with a ten metre run of Terms and Conditions, one does tend to click "Yes" without reading more than three lines.
And it wouldn't overcome deliberate misbehaviour, of course. It would only help the innocent web-surfer. But I have, without meaning to, broken three of the rules outlined above. It could help a little bit.
Fantastic idea Marsh, I totally concur with Indiesinger and hope this is implemented asap....
If the Editor was able to put this and ewand's suggestion together
http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/AB-Suggestions/Question71593.html
it would help the new and regular users