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I personally don't like the idea of putting all the information in one post in this forum. Because when you are presented with every knowledge you will never go through all of them. Just the basic and you may think that you have known all of it. Just to give you an idea, when people search on the internet, and it is difficult to find but in the end they actually find it, The valued more and they are really easy to learn about it.
Now imagine where everything is presented in one single page and you can search it and it will show up. As I mentioned, people won't put that much value in it. They will only learn the basics or few that are on the top and then went on gambling and make a huge loss. They will come back to you and blame you for their losses. Have you ever seen people praising those who share the tips and for them other people have won? That never happens and will never happen.
Even if it's all there, people these days are so lazy they don't even want to search the internet to do the research. They will hear a little bit of gossip or some little thing on the internet and they will trust that with everything. This is what makes today's people so much dangerous. They don't want to learn but they want to blame.
Your perspective is intriguing; doesn't it spark analytical discussion? The contradiction of ease of access to knowledge and its perceived worth (and impact on learning) in the digital era is especially evident in high-stakes areas like gambling and cockfighting.
Imagine Alex finding a well-written post. Alex gets only the basics, gambles it all, and loses. Alex's superficial engagement or the post? In online culture, your idea about accountability in losses and lack of acclaim in gains is very relevant. But isn't this a chance?
Imagine building a forum conversational AI that delivers information, interacts, engages, and directs users to learn in a systematic, depth-enhancing way. Not just an information dump, but a guide, a mentor, guiding people through the maze betting and knowledge, fostering a deeper understanding and reducing the temptation to blame others for failures. Could a intervention reconcile ease and depth, reshaping user engagement and learning efficacy while instilling personal responsibility? How about exploring this avenue?