[Question] How important is it that LW has an unlimited supply of karma?

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/wgvwhokzYArtBKxtW/how-important-is-it-that-lw-has-an-unlimited-supply-of-karma

Question

LessWrong users can up/​downvote posts and comments, which then receive a karma boost (capped by the voters own karma). There is no limit to how many different posts and comments one can do this to. In this sense there is an unlimited supply of karma to be handed out. (This is also the case for Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, HackerNews(?), Medium, …) Is this important? That is, does it have non-trivial medium or long-term effects on the "LessWrong economy"—the kind and amount of content that gets produced?

Rough Thoughts

Here are some quick thoughts I wrote down. I publish this question despite them being unfinished, instead of letting them wither deep in my Google Drive. Under the current system…

If instead of the current system each karma point given was taken from your own score, then…

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/wgvwhokzYArtBKxtW/how-important-is-it-that-lw-has-an-unlimited-supply-of-karma?commentId=QpXQ92PHNadaqwL68

Let us consider such a conserved karma system. For every group of users that gets upvoted by outsiders more than they upvote outsiders, their karma is going to increase until the increase to their voting power produces an equilibrium. Consider such a powerful group that tends to upvote each other a lot, no conspiracy required. Their posts are going to be more visible without the group spending any of their collective power to make it happen. More visible posts will get more upvotes, compounding the group’s power with interest. There are combinatorially many potential groups, and this karma system would naturally seek out the groups that best fit the above story, and grant them power.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/wgvwhokzYArtBKxtW/how-important-is-it-that-lw-has-an-unlimited-supply-of-karma?commentId=bCz5mBTFjFSi4gxCw

Karma cannot be spent. It’s not an economy, it’s just an indicator of popularity. I don’t know how to measure, but I strongly expect that most of the information content about post quality/​prefer-ability/​whatever is conveyed between −2 and +10 total votes, and anything outside that range is valueless.