Yesterday I've received the following reply:
Meta StackExchange actually recommends that most questions, even ones that are network-wide, are asked on child metas first. Then, if it makes sense for them to be moved, the OP can move up to Meta.SE. So while this wouldn't be off-topic at MSE, I don't think it's off-topic here, either.
And I was astonished. So I checked my last flags that I've sent to the moderators for migration (from meta.SO to meta.SE) and apparently they have all been rejected. Specifically this one and this one.
I understand the whole fuss of having a "real meta stackoverflow", but a part from the technicalities (reputation system changes), meta stackoverflow is exactly the same as before. Question that should be on meta.SE are being posted on meta.SO. Not only that but it seems like moderators are recommending this behavior.
I'll try to explain to you why, in my honest opinion, this is just plain silly.
Cross site duplicates
The huge and main problem I can see is cross-site duplicated. Not only cross-site duplicated between the "old meta.SO" and the "new meta.SO", but also between metas of every other website. If this kind of behavior is recommended on every meta website, how many "Should I comment or just downvote?" do we really need?
Duplicates in general are a huge problem, and I think we all know the reasons for that: we are splitting answers in difference places, making them harder to retrieve.
Just as a clear example of what this causes, I'll list few cross site duplicates that I've just noticed:
- Comments can't contain that content - "What have you tried?"
- Should I comment or just downvote?
- Why the minimum of 5 seconds between comment votes?
- Why did the Community user reject my suggested edit?
- Dealing with an answer that wasn't accepted (maybe because a user is a newbie on Stack Overflow)
These are just the first five top questions in the main page stream right now, I'm sure you can find many more since the first day of the new meta.SO.
meta.SE is just useless
If "network questions" are generally accepted and "dealt with" on "local" sites, then what do we even have meta.SE for?
This question has already an answer somewhere
That's right. This question is a cross-site duplicate of this question about cross-site duplicates.
If moderators will take this personally and move it there and close it as a duplicate, then, why not all the others as well?
My answer to the "accepted answer"
For the amount of support we could feasibly build into this, we're not really getting much in return beyond what we get by just posting an answer with a link in it. In fact, we're getting less than that, because with an answer we at least get the chance of offering site-specific guidance in addition to linking in the network-global discussion.
Then why even beginning this whole fuss? Meta.SO was well known to be the center of meta stackexchange-related questions. It never generated any problem at all.
The only problem was that it wasn't symmetrical with the other websites. So what? Who cared? I read that as "we wanted this huge change for no practical reasons, but we are not doing it right because it would require too much effort" (please take that with an happy tone) (don't ban me please :)) (I love you Jeff).
You see where I'm going with this? Even though it's a network-wide feature, the actual guidance for interacting with it must necessarily be customized to some extent per-site. There are a lot of questions like that...
I see where you are going with this. Those are clearly corner cases (not in the sense they don't happen many times, but in the sense that they are too localized), and it really doesn't matter where they are dealt with because it won't likely be helpful to anyone else.
The kind of questions you just mentioned are not the ones that would benefit from rethinking this. Take the 5 example above as an example of real SE specific questions.
More duplicates as we speak
Given the popularity of the question, I'll add 22 more examples of the problem:
- How should I flag a literal plagiarism of a question?
- When is using an other poster's content plagiarism
- Suspension till 2027
- Questions that have more upvotes than views
- "Mortarboard" continues to be awarded
- Why does downvoting an answer cost reputation while questions not?
- Can I block/hide activity of a user?
- Question with no answers, but issue solved in the comments (or extended in chat)
- Why can't I accept an answer in the first 15 minutes after asking the question?
- My question never got answered, what can I do?
- How should accepted link-only answers be handled?
- How to respond to late answers that are duplicates of accepted answers?
- How are flag limits calculated?
- Unable to comment as a new member - what about unclear questions?
- What does +0 bounty earned stand for?
- Should we downvote, flag or leave comments on Spam?
- How should questions containing proprietary code be handled when OP asks for deletion
- "Too minor" edits - better to leave poor quality on the site?
- Is it OK to downvote questions because of bad grammar?
- What do I do when I run out of flags?
- How should we handle edits adding unnecessary `code` tags?
- Why is the accepted answer not on top?
All the questions linked above have an high score at the time of posting. I'm ignoring cross-site duplicates with < 5
score points.