Many of the newer sites have a certain degree of overlap.

With the creation of Chem.SE, I noticed quite a few questions on Physics.SE which could have benefited from the chem community and vice versa. There also are a few that could benefit from bio.SE..

Now these questions don't warrant a migration. They can be double-posted, but this doesn't lead to a smooth experience. Even when cross-linked, changes to either post (new answers,new comments,etc) aren't effectively relayed to the other site, and the two questions are just that-- two, separate questions.

One solution that came to my mind was a "soft migration" option for mods. By this, a question on site A stays on site A. But, it appears in the site B question list as well. Edits/answers should bump it.

Basically, there will be a placeholder item in the questions list of site B. It shows the votes/views/answers of the post on site A, along with the tags (maybe stylized differently). These should be an unobtrusive way to quickly identify what the site is.

The post should also be bumped whenever the post is bumped on Site A, and it should display the rep/time/etc of the bumping user as usual.

Here's a quick mockup of what happens on the site B question list:

enter image description here

Without being obtrusive or in-your-face (stuff like [migrated] is sort of in-your-face), the post is elegantly shown to be on Physics.SE (well, if you know the icon, anyway). The tags are italicized to show that they link to a different site tags, and the "bumping user" (me) has his/her rep on that site shown. We can also add an indicator on the question on site A (like this) that shows that it was soft-migrated. We can use tooltips as well on the icons to tell us why they're here. After all, half of SE documentation is in tooltips.


Now I know that these issues will probably be raised:

  • Rep: An avid user on Site B gets no Site B rep for giving a good answer on Site A. Frankly, I don't care about this to much, but others may.

  • Implementation: It may get complicated. Internally, I'd propose that none of the question data is copied, rather Site A pushes the vote/bump data whenever a vote/bump happens. The easiest way to then implement the soft merge would be to have a table of questions soft-merged "to" site B on site B itself, with columns for all the vote/etc data. The questions table should have an extra column for "soft-migrated to"--that way Site A can determine where to push new data to on every vote/bump. Now, all Site B has to do is take the JOIN of the questions table and the soft-merge table and display them in the new questions list (or any list, for that matter). With some extra formatting, maybe. Of course, I may be oversimplifying this and I don't really know what I'm talking about ;-)

  • Is there a need? : Yes, I would say so. Such questions can get awesome answers is both the communities participate, but our don't-cross-post-much policy deters this. In the end, this will result in better post quality, making the Internet better. Also, as area51 grows, we will see this problem more and more, and this will become more and more necessary.

Thoughts? Any better ideas? Waffles?


Update: Another use case for this would be to soft migrate all MSO questions over to child metas, effectively solving Make network-wide FAQ posts available on per-site metas

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+1 Great idea! I have been looking for a solution myself to the same problem! I have seen several posts that could be on both MSO and Area-51 discussion. This solution is perfect! – Ephraim May 9 '12 at 12:45
@Ephraim: Well, I admit that MSO+a51 wasn't what I was thinking of, but that works too. – Manishearth May 9 '12 at 12:59
Hi @ManishEarth, you may be interested in this conversation. Suppose a soft-migration involved just posting an ad with a link to the question, or showing it on the bulletin board, as opposed to mixing it in with the other questions on the site. – jmort253 Sep 12 '12 at 2:58
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@jmort253: Interesting idea. May not be as effective, as the community bulletin is not too noticeable, and one doesn't want to clutter it either. Similar problems with ads--we're trained to ignore them, and I only notice the ads with cool-looking site logos on them. Still, a viable alternative :) – Manishearth Sep 12 '12 at 6:11
What about a special tab? We have "newest", "top voted", "active". What about "shared"? Of course, these mixed questions should only be shown on the parent site, and the question links in "shared" would just take you to that other site..... – jmort253 Sep 12 '12 at 6:13
@jmort253: Ah, so similar to the above, except that the redirects are separated. Interesting, though there may have to be an indicator similar to the bounty one on it for it to work effectively. – Manishearth Sep 12 '12 at 6:43

2 Answers

I think making the same question appear permanently on multiple sites is clutter. When a question is borderline and unanswered, a migration can give it a second chance, but otherwise I'd leave it where it is.

If the question was asked and answered on community 1 and someone else from community 2 has the same question, the two questions are likely to be different, tailored to each community. Link them to each other to show different perspectives.

On the Science Fiction & Fantasy chatroom, we have feeds for SF questions asked on Literature and Movies & TV. This is a way to advertise topical questions asked elsewhere.

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If your chatroom is unused or too busy, feeds don't work. Also, I think we can trust our mods,to handle "clutter" by only softmigrating the good ones. – Manishearth May 10 '12 at 2:41

It's highly unlikely that exactly the same question will be on topic on more than one site. There are exceptions (Stack Overflow and Game Development), but by and large if you are after an answer from more than one community then it's probably a sign that your question is not focused enough.

At the very least you should rewrite the question so that it is focused on that community. So to take the Stack Overflow/Game Development overlap as an example, you might have a coding question about the game you're writing. If you ask on Stack Overflow it should be couched in a general purpose programming way without too much emphasis on the gaming aspect. However, if you were to ask on Game Development you might want to bring that aspect out to the fore to get a different perspective on the problem.

It would be better to ask on one site and then if you are not getting the answers you need ask for it to be migrated, or ask a better question on the other site.

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There are also traffic concerns. Some of the stuff on area-51 (non proposal-specific stuff, like feature requests) could be on either 51, or MSO, but no one seems to see anything on area-51 discussion, so it would be nice to have some of them "soft migrated" so people actually notice them. – Ephraim May 9 '12 at 12:54
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That's the point. It may not exactly be on topic for both sites, but it certainly is beneficial for the question to get attention from both. Chat doesn't cut it. And the Gamedev/SO difference is pretty clear. [physical-chemistry] works equally well on chem.SE and phy.SEfor nearly all the questions. A similar thing happens with [biochemistry]. – Manishearth May 9 '12 at 12:54
StackOverflow has a lot of overlap with other sites...and I've frequently "soft migrated" questions when one site isn't getting the correct attention. – sixlettervariables May 9 '12 at 13:08
@sixlettervariables - how have you been "soft migrating" questions? This feature doesn't exist yet... – Ephraim May 9 '12 at 14:29
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@Ephraim - I suspect he's been cross posting questions. – ChrisF May 9 '12 at 14:32
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I'm strongly disagreeing with the idea that questions are unlikely to be on topic for multiple domains. Personally I think only technocrats are so presumptious that they know the precise lines between two related domains. – owlstead May 9 '12 at 21:28
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There are overlaps, inevitably more and more as more sites come onto the scene. – Gilles May 9 '12 at 21:31
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@owlstead - that may be true in the real world, but here on Stack Exchange our domains are fairly tightly constrained. It's one of the reasons it works. Also I'm not saying that the same question can't be posted on multiple sites - just that it should be tailored to suit the audience. – ChrisF May 9 '12 at 21:32
The domains on Stack Exchange seem very much copied from the "real world" to me. – owlstead May 9 '12 at 21:39
@ChrisF - there are overlaps - SQL on Database and also SO, Mac questions on SU and Apple, Unix scripts on SO, Apple, Linux and Ubuntu – Mark Sep 3 '12 at 10:55
@Mark - SO existed long before the Database site as did SU before Apple, Unix & Linux and AskUbuntu. While questions are technically on topic on SO or SU you might get a better answer on DBA or Apple/U&L/AskU, but that's not a reason to cross post. If anything you should request migration. – ChrisF Sep 3 '12 at 10:59
@ChrisF the issue is that actually migration will give a worse answer as less people will see it also I did try flagging for migration from SU to Apple but was refused as it was on topic – Mark Sep 3 '12 at 11:26
@Mark - is it? While it might be see by fewer people, those people should have a better understanding of the domain on the more specialised site. – ChrisF Sep 3 '12 at 11:28
@ChrisF - no as say for shell scripts it is not OS dependent and in other cases the SU moderators want the question on the more general site – Mark Sep 3 '12 at 11:29

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