Every online community with real stakes eventually faces the same problem: someone shows up to take advantage of everyone else.
Platforms usually answer with moderators and reporting buttons. That works up to a point. But the most interesting anti-fraud systems I’ve seen weren’t built by platform teams at all. They grew out of users deciding, collectively, that they were tired of getting burned.
Reputation is older than the internet
The mechanism isn’t new. Medieval trade fairs had merchant courts. eBay’s feedback score was a 1997 attempt at the same idea. What’s new is speed — a community can now build a shared reputation record in days rather than decades.
That cuts both ways, and people who celebrate the speed usually only count one side of it. A fraud gets exposed in a week instead of a year. An innocent party also gets buried in an afternoon, before anyone has checked anything.
Gaming communities figured this out early. Trading scams in MMOs produced blacklists. Free Fire and mobile gaming groups developed their own conventions for verifying that a seller is real before anything changes hands. None of this is in the official rules. It’s folk law, and it’s often enforced more consistently than the official rules are.
A Korean case worth looking at
Korean online communities are unusually good at this, and I think it’s a function of density. The market is small, most users are on a handful of large platforms, and word travels fast. If an operator burns people, everyone hears about it that week.
Look at happytoto24.com and you’ll see the structure clearly. Members file reports about operators who failed to pay out. Those reports get an evidence requirement — screenshots, transaction records, timestamps. Other members weigh in. Confirmed cases get archived permanently, and the archive doesn’t get deleted when the operator apologizes.
That last detail matters more than it sounds. Most reputation systems fail because bad actors negotiate their record away. A permanent archive removes the negotiation.
The community has also published a guide to spotting fraudulent operators, which is basically the pattern library they assembled from their own casualties. Domain age. Payout delays that start small. Support that stops answering on weekends. None of it is clever. All of it is expensive to learn firsthand.
Where self-policing breaks
I want to be honest about the failure modes, because community moderation gets romanticized.
False accusations
A user who loses money and blames the wrong party can destroy a legitimate operator’s reputation in an afternoon. Evidence requirements help. They don’t solve it.
Capture
Any reputation system with real economic weight attracts people who want to sell favorable treatment. This is the quiet death of a lot of review communities — nothing dramatic happens, the standards just erode until the archive means nothing.
Mob dynamics
Crowds are good at pattern-matching and bad at proportionality. The response to a minor complaint and a serious fraud often looks identical. I’ve watched a two-day payout delay generate roughly the same volume of outrage as an operator vanishing with everyone’s balance, and the archive files both as entries.
What actually holds it together
The communities that survive tend to share three unglamorous traits.
Evidence is mandatory
Not encouraged. Required, and enforced even when the accuser is sympathetic.
Records are permanent and public
The moment an entry can be removed by request, the archive stops being a record.
Moderators are visible people
Accounts with history, not anonymous handles. Anonymous authority erodes.
None of that scales elegantly. All of it requires someone to care on a Tuesday when nothing is happening.
That’s probably why platforms keep trying to automate it, and why it keeps not working. Trust is maintenance work. There isn’t a feature for it.
Frequently asked questions
Doesn’t community policing just become mob justice?
Sometimes. The ones that avoid it require evidence before a complaint enters the record at all. The ones that don’t become mobs, usually within a year.
Why don’t the platforms handle this themselves?
Most try. The problem is that platform moderation optimizes for volume and liability, while a reputation system needs someone who cares about one specific dispute from three years ago.
What stops false accusations?
Nothing stops them. Evidence requirements make them expensive, which is a different thing.
Do blacklists actually work?
They work when they’re permanent and public. A blacklist that can be edited by request isn’t a blacklist, it’s a price list.
Can a community reputation system be gamed?
Yes, and the effective method isn’t fake accusations — it’s patience. Build standing over a year, become a trusted voice, then spend that credibility once. Communities defend badly against a long game, because the defense would require distrusting their most active members.

