Astrotrain
Triple Changer
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2024
- Posts
- 160
I keep hearing that Laurel is the only person checking, accepting or rejecting every story submitted. How is that even possible? How many stories are submitted every day?
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The site has seen a lot of growth. When I first started paying attention, that 71 stories-a-day average would have been a light day, but now it isn't odd for Laurel to publish three times that in a day. Today, for instance, the New list contains 238 stories.I don't know about the first half of that question either, but I can help with the second.
If you search " " (just a single space), you get 639,298 story results. Since every story must have spaces to reach 750 words, we can take that as a total for the story count on this site.
The first non-admin story was published on 12/09/1999. That was 8,973 days ago. 639,298 / 8,973 = 71.23.
Since the beginning, there have been ~71.23 stories per day.
Obviously this doesn't count for deleted stories, and it doesn't account for the fact that the number will not be consistent. It will fluctuate, and it may have trended upwards in recent years - I don't know.
Yes, I imagine it's steadily rising. Laurel mentioned somewhere once that it's usually over 200 per day. A more recent data set would be useful.The site has seen a lot of growth. When I first started paying attention, that 71 stories-a-day average would have been a light day, but now it isn't odd for Laurel to publish three times that in a day. Today, for instance, the New list contains 238 stories.
On the main categories page, the links to each category shows the number of stories in the category. So, another way to get the number of stories on the site is to add up the number of stories in each category.
No one here knows exactly how they make the literary sausage. "Nobody has ever see the Wizard. Even I haven't."Isn’t it likely that she has some help? Trusted, but silent, helpers?
Of course not. Laurel has a team of trained Oompa-Loompas who do most of the reviews.Does one person really proof read all the stories?
Not sure how many are submitted, but the "New" Category typically has between 1,000 and 1,500 stories which have been posted in the last week, so somewhere around 200 per day on average is likely, depending on what percentage get rejected. If she has other human eyes reviewing them, they're a secretive lot. Presumably she uses some automated tools to assist, aside from the AI detector(s) everyone likes ruminating about.I keep hearing that Laurel is the only person checking, accepting or rejecting every story submitted. How is that even possible? How many stories are submitted every day?
Oompa, Loompa, doompa-dee-doOf course not. Laurel has a team of trained Oompa-Loompas who do most of the reviews.
Emily
Nah, I like the idea of just one lady actually going through all the filth we are submitting, while she sits in a flowery garden and sips her afternoon tea as she samples the works like a fine wine.Yeah, just seems like an Occam’s razor sort of thing. Helpers.
Also, does NC/R get checked more rigorously than other categories? My one story in that category took a week to approve, as opposed to the usual 1-2 days.I heard many years ago that hiring companies often have a program that they run resumes through that look for keywords. So your resume would have to have, say three of the keywords they are looking for before the resume ever gets seen by human eyes.
It seems reasonable that Laurel would have something similar that looks for keywords. Things like sixteen years old or dog or rape or held her down. I would also not be surprised if regular posters, who have never given her any grief and have always played by the rules, get an auto pass. Knowing also that the writer probably has a following and any issues will be caught by readers and reported. Same thing for anything submitted in non-erotic. My non-erotic 750-word story was submitted and posted the next day.
We know she kicks things back for grammar, so she likely has some sort of checker for that. We know new writers get a more thorough inspection.
It makes sense to me that NC/R, I/T, and EH would be scrutinized a little more closely, yes.Also, does NC/R get checked more rigorously than other categories? My one story in that category took a week to approve, as opposed to the usual 1-2 days.
That would make sense, but my one EH story and my six I/T stories all went through without any delay.It makes sense to me that NC/R, I/T, and EH would be scrutinized a little more closely, yes.
I doubt its people, it's a program that's set up to kick certain things out that flag the rules.Yeah, just seems like an Occam’s razor sort of thing. Helpers.
You don't read there much, do you?Also, does NC/R get checked more rigorously than other categories? My one story in that category took a week to approve, as opposed to the usual 1-2 days.
On the 5th, 241 new stories appeared. Let's say an average of 5,000 words. That's 1,205,000 words... in one day. Of course, there are also the rejected stories. No-one can read that much day in, day out. So either there is a secret team or Laurel (if she actually exists) is using software to scan for key words, phrases and AI usage. I imagine it's the latter, but as the owner/s of this site have a pathological hatred of engaging with authors and readers, I guess we'll never know.
It won't accept 'age play' or 'little girl' either, as tags, though I think 'adult baby' or 'lg' pass.Well, it is certain that there’s some sort of a list, RR. As an example, I did a successful series on a sugar-baby/sugar-daddy relationship. I found that the word ‘baby’ could not be entered in the Short Description. Now, there’s a reason tiny humans probably aren’t a good thing to invoke here, but that’s hardly the same thing. It was an automatic refusal on the part of the site to accept b-a-b-y (although, curiously, that term could be used in the text with no problem). It’s hard to escape the conclusion that some level of electronic screening is not being used.
Right - I forgot it wouldn’t accept anything with ‘baby’ as a tag, either. Thanks for pointing that out.It won't accept 'age play' or 'little girl' either, as tags, though I think 'adult baby' or 'lg' pass.
'Death' is another tag that isn't allowed, which I would have thought would be helpful for people not wanting to read stories with a death in, but 'funeral' and 'grief' were allowed (used for my story After the Funeral.)