In the spirit of trying to improve the quality of Stack Overflow, I've been looking for closed questions I think I know something about, to see whether they can be salvaged.
As we've discussed many times here, there's no reputation gaming incentive to do so, but I was in a good mood, and I don't really need points anyway.
My first attempt was this two-year old question which was "closed as not a real question" at the time, but it had a couple of answers (including one of mine).
I think the closure at the time was legitimate (no argument about that). The question was indeed rather vague, but I think this had more to do with the asker not necessarily being a native speaker.
The question was however sufficiently short and, although poorly introduced, it was really mainly about details about one method in the Java API (SSLContext.getInstance(String)
). Hence, I reworded the question to try to make it more suitable, and voted to re-open it (although it had a delete vote in its past form).
I think the resulting question can be it on-topic, but that's of course debatable. (I'll admit being biased because one of the answer is mine, but I would suggest my answer at least adds value to Stack Overflow in that it provides direct references to three paragraphs in three different official documents as well as a link to the relevant source code, which an RTFM to the JSSE Reference Guide or API document it itself wouldn't give you.)
Within a couple of minutes following the edit, both answers were downvoted.
I get the impression that some people just have this idea that downvoting answers to off-topic or closed question is the right thing to do because it discourages answerers to answer such questions (and thus should discourage askers to ask that type of question). Is that just an impression? Is this the semi-officially recommended behaviour?
I was going to try to go through a number of old questions I have answered over the past four years to try to improve them when applicable. However, this sort of behaviour is certainly not encouraging any curating effort.
protocol
in SSLContext(String protocol)", which ends up being a rather straightforward request for clarification on that particular point of the API. (I could have misinterpreted this, of course, but it doesn't seem too ambiguous, even for someone who wouldn't know this part of the API, IMO.)setEnabledProtocols
with the actual protocols you want (its not sufficient to callgetInstance("TLS")
). I filed a security bug against Oracle for that behavior a couple of years ago.