The Evolution of Rating Systems: From Stars to AI Sentiment
A Brief History of Criticism
Before the internet, the general public relied on professional gatekeepers—movie critics like Siskel & Ebert, the Michelin Guide for restaurants, or the Better Business Bureau for trade reliability. Today, the power to critique has been democratized, and every individual with a smartphone is a critic. But the way we express our satisfaction is evolving beyond the traditional gold star into more complex, data-driven systems.
The Shift from Scalar to Binary Systems
Interestingly, some of the world’s largest platforms have moved away from the 1-5 star scale in favor of binary systems. YouTube originally used stars but found that the vast majority of users either gave 1 star or 5 stars, making the 2, 3, and 4-star options statistically irrelevant. Netflix followed suit, moving to a “Thumbs Up/Down” and a “Percentage Match.” The logic is rooted in simplicity: a binary choice removes the cognitive load of deciding if a movie is a 3 or a 4. It focuses purely on “utility”—did you like this enough to want more of it? While simpler for the user, it provides less nuance for the “thing” being rated.
Emotional Reactions and Multi-Dimensional Feedback
Social media platforms like Facebook and LinkedIn introduced “Reactions,” allowing users to express anger, sadness, laughter, or curiosity. This is a form of multi-dimensional rating. For brands and content creators, this provides much deeper data than a simple star rating. It tells them not just if people interacted with a product, but how it made them feel. If a news article gets 1,000 “Angry” reactions, it might be more successful in terms of engagement than one with 100 “Likes.”
The Future: AI Sentiment Analysis
In the near future, the act of “rating” might become invisible. AI can already scan thousands of written comments and determine a “sentiment score” based on natural language processing. Instead of asking you to click a button, platforms will analyze your written feedback to determine how you feel. This allows for a more organic way of understanding public opinion. At rate-things.com, we believe that combining human-selected stars with AI-driven sentiment analysis will be the gold standard for future transparency.