Before I get into my question, I want to make it clear that this is not specifically about Area 51, and it should not be closed/moved as such. It is about the whole network of sites, and just uses Area 51 as an example.

I was browsing through Area 51 and saw this proposal. I noticed that it probably isn't a good idea for a proposal--15 out of 16 questions are closed. Then, I saw that they were all closed by the same 10ish people. This may be an extreme case (the proposal actually is bad), but are there any systems in place in case 5-10 people decide that they don't like a proposal and just close all of the questions? Say, for example, a group of one religion/race closed the questions for a proposal about another religion/race. I know there are systems to catch serial voting, but what about closing?

share|improve this question
6  
That is a hilariously bad proposal. +1 for the entertainment! – AakashM Apr 24 '12 at 15:45
9  
Do you think my girlfriend will find it weird that I play an attractive, scantily-clad female character in [video game]? [closed] -- I don't want to live in a world where that's not an on-topic question! – Adam Rackis Apr 24 '12 at 16:46

3 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

Then, I saw that they were all closed by the same 10ish people.

There are extremely few people active on Area 51 in general (as in, actually curating the proposals). Those 10ish people are pretty much all we have on Area 51.

The proposal itself is one that will invite questions that don't really follow our guidelines, especially the subjectivity part.

So the closes are legitimate.

"Serial closing" has the same issues. I'd have been banned from Meta Stack Overflow long ago if that was in place. A similar thing with Physics.SE -- we only have a few CV-ers. Bad idea.

share|improve this answer
1  
There are 69 people on A51 with 3k (close votes), and a quick random sample showed more than half of them hadn't been active in the last week or so. – Kevin Apr 24 '12 at 15:10
@Kevin hmmm, maybe. My general opinion of Area51 is that its a great place, but has a bare-bones community. – Manishearth Apr 24 '12 at 15:17

A single close vote, alone, has no effect. Likewise, a single person's close votes have no effect, by themselves. If I voted to close every one of someone's posts, for example, nothing would happen at all if my votes were not valid.., because no one else would vote the same.

Contrast this with up/down votes; they have real, immediate effects.

So, I don't think there needs to be any automated system for detecting such things, overall.

Also, many sites have a hard time getting the 5 votes necessary to close posts as it is.

share|improve this answer
+1(to be awarded tomorrow, reached limit) for "Also, many sites have a hard time getting the 5 votes necessary to close posts as it is.". Nearly all our CVs on Phy.SE need a mod-binding-CV – Manishearth Apr 24 '12 at 15:09

I'm going to say this without lot's of backing research, but in my experience on Stack Exchange, serial closers - or as I call them, close trolls - are (one of the only) SERIOUSLY broken aspects of the fundamental "machine".

Yes, no single vote can close a question… but there IS a TYPE of PERSON, that collectively, forms almost the same effect as if a single vote COULD close a question.

It's a tough line to draw, as most likely, a good deal of the feedback that "this type" of user provides is probably beneficial… weeding out crapy questions, finding dupes, etc. However, I suspect that a fair amount of the more-OCD-inclined, upwardly privileged users that make closing questions "their thing".. QUICKLY lose perspective… and really start to lose the sort of OVERALL perspective you need when voting to close a question.

Honestly, this is a bigger issue, and one I think Stack Exchange would be wise to hire a trained psychologist for, full-time - just to consider the aspects of human nature (AKA personality disorders, etc. LOL) that not only take a toll on certain aspects of the site… but also ways to focus, cope, and compensate for them.

share|improve this answer
1  
Why the odd use of code? And any examples to support the above? Like it's written now, this just sounds like trolling to me. – Arjan Apr 24 '12 at 20:51
2  
It's convenient that you chose not to bring examples or research to the table, because a claim like yours certainly requires it. In my experience (and opinion), the high volume of low quality questions is the biggest issue, and "close trolls" are one of the only deterrents to that problem. – Wesley Murch Apr 24 '12 at 21:16
As I said from the, this is an abstract issue that is hard to document. AFAIK it's not possible to track who closes what so these are more of long-term observations. Say - when I run a SO or google search that I have made.. I will look to see why a Question (which I myself had at that time been searching for) has been closed. Often the reasons are "too specific", or "not a real question".. Well, I had the question, so in that sense it IS real… and "too specific" IS by nature, quite subjective.. No troll intent, I promise. These are touchy subjects, but my concern is genuine. – alex gray Apr 24 '12 at 23:09
1  
I read your post with interest, expecting to find myself mentioned as one of these supposed "Close trolls", but I was disappointed to find that you didn't give any examples at all! Now who is going to pay for my psychologist to help me work through my issues? I had one of those "funny uncles" growing up, and I now take out my anger at the world by closing other people's questions on the Internet. – Cody Gray Apr 25 '12 at 3:44
@WesleyMurch I did not mean to sound ungrateful of the overall positive influence closers provide, but again, it is impossible to know how many questions are closed, for what reasons, or to self-police each other's close rates, etc. I do not know, is there a daily or weekly allowance for close votes? My observations are simply that, and I apologize if anyone takes it personally.. i just think that the "rush of the close" can get, well, a bit crazed. This is a format that can support obscure questions, and I am simply saying that I have seen questions get swept under the rug. – alex gray Apr 25 '12 at 5:08
@alexgray: It's not personal so don't sweat it. To some very small extent I can identify with your reaction, and I know it's tough to dredge up examples on-the-fly when you need them, but your post is an insulting rant (did you notice?). Hard to take anything you say seriously, and I very much doubt you could provide even one example of a question that was unjustly closed. – Wesley Murch Apr 25 '12 at 5:18
One Two Three Why? Active voting, multiple responses, lively discussion, approved answers, etc. There are many. + Who knows what ?'s will never get asked by angst-ridden would-be posters. Adage: there is no bad question.(debateable) PS: My humor is rarely meta-appreciated. – alex gray Apr 25 '12 at 5:36
All inappropriate questions, each in its own way. – Rosinante Sep 9 '12 at 18:35
Speaking as an active "close troll" I couldn't disagree more. I vote to close crud. I occasionally vote to close something that is not constructive but mostly it's genuine crud. I don't see this as a bad thing. – ben is uǝq backwards Sep 9 '12 at 19:40

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged