this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2024
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This ignores the first part of my response - if I, as a legitimate user, might get caught up in one of these trees, either by mistakenly approving a bot, or approving a user who approves a bot, and I risk losing my account if this happens, what is my incentive to approve anyone?
Additionally, let's assume I'm a really dumb bot creator, and I keep all of my bots in the same tree. I don't bother to maintain a few legitimate accounts, and I don't bother to have random users approve some of the bots. If my entire tree gets nuked, it's still only a few weeks until I'm back at full force.
With a very slightly smarter bot creator, you also won't have a nice tree:
As a new user looking for an approver, how do I know I'm not requesting (or otherwise getting) approved by a bot? To appear legitimate, they would be incentivized to approve legitimate users, in addition to bots.
A reasonably intelligent bot creator would have several accounts they directly control and use legitimately (this keeps their foot in the door), would mix reaching out to random users for approval with having bots approve bots, and would approve legitimate users in addition to bots. The tree ends up as much more of a tangled graph.
It feels like you're making the argument that both random users wouldn't approve anything in the first paragraph and they would readily approve bots in the fourth.
The reality is most users would probably be fairly permissive but might be delayed in their authorizations (ex they're offline). If a bot acts enough like a person it probably won't get caught right away but its likely whoever did let it in will be barred from authorizing people. I'm not saying this is a perfect solution but I would argue its an improvement over existing systems as over time users that are better at sussing out bots will likely be the largest group able to authorize people.
I'd imagine there would need to be an option for whoever was an authorization was made to (the authorizor) to start a DM chain with the requesting account.