@buherator @albinowax Not only that, dividing no/maybe/yes into 11 possible responses seems unnecessary and absurd.
@buherator @albinowax we can write a replacement in common lisp.....
@buherator it’s not asking you to recommend it. It’s collecting feedback to improve the tool so that we don’t exclusively rely on people venting on social media 🤷
@buherator thanks for the follow up. If you’re interested in the details behind the score and the value you can find some context at https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_promoter_score
Tbh I’d way more concerned about this. In Europe this is illegal under GDPR law as I have a right to obtain and request deletion of all information a company owns about me
@albinowax @buherator ah I always wondered why I was seeing more of these 0-10 score things.
FWIW I don't think this will work well with a product like burp due to user demographics and geographical distribution (unless you're accounting for them in your scoring).
For geographical elements, different countries vary quite substantially from the USAs idea of what "good" looks like, and I'd guess Burp's got a fairly varied customer base.
Then there's the fact that security people are (somewhat correctly) seen as a cynical bunch, who I'd expect are more likely to downrank a product compared to an average consumer.
It'd be interesting to see what the results of this experiment are, and whether it's possible to get useful signal from it.