Lots of people are talking about this, so time to throw my hat in the ring. Note that this is just my idea and hasn't really been vetted by other Stack Exchange employees (probably some of them will chime in here).
Background: of "rep addicts" and "help vampires"
See this answer to "Why is Stack Overflow so negative of late?". Basically, we've got a bunch of users asking low-quality questions because they legitimately need help. They haven't done their research, they didn't put in the time to create a good question, but it's still often an answerable question.
How do we know that it's answerable? Because they're still getting answers. Users who want rep are happy enough to answer these questions and collect some easy points. This is still a net win for the Internet because it's one more public artifact that might help somebody some day (and if it really can't help anybody, I still strongly believe we should close & delete it).
Take, for example, this fine post: how to get data from external url in Jquery. Is it high-quality? No, it's basically a "fix my code" question. Is it asked 100 different times every day? Yes, and it almost certainly had been asked before. Did the answerer make the Internet a better place by answering it? Yes: it's a good answer for anyone looking to solve this common problem, and it has 7000 views!
My suggestion: create a tab that filters out questions identified as low quality
We already have a low-quality algorithm that runs on new posts. It needs some work, but for now let's pretend it works and produces a moderately accurate score between 0 and 100 (0 being trash, 100 being excellent in the eyes of the algorithm). Right now we take the absolute worst of those and send them to the Low Quality Queue for review. My suggestion is to create a new tab that shows only posts with a quality score > some threshold.
The upshot is this:
- Users who are tired of seeing repetitive, low-quality questions can ignore them.
- Users who want to help those people or earn some easy rep can continue answering those questions.
Won't this create a two-class system?
No. Unlike other proposals:
- The default will still be to show all questions, or at least some balanced combination, so everything will still be seen by somebody.
- You don't have to be above a certain rep to see / participate in the high-quality questions. A new user can ask or answer a high quality question just the same as anybody else.
- Questions can get upvoted into the high-quality list. If question score is an indicator of quality, one or two upvotes will be enough to bump a post up into the high-quality list.
Why not just get rid of all the low-quality posts entirely?
Because, like it or not, many users enjoy answering these questions, and there's no reason to stop them from doing so. Yes, maybe they are doing it just to earn some quick rep, but they are still helping at least one person and quite possibly the Internet at large.
We're still going to review the lowest quality posts and close / delete them. This is a second tier above that which are answerable but which some users do not want to see.
Can we actually identify low-quality questions?
This is the hard part, but I think we can. It's a reasonably straightforward Machine Learning problem: define all the features we think might be relevant, get a data set of known good posts (upvoted) and known bad posts (downvoted, deleted, closed), then train to see which features are good predictors. The features we'd likely look at include:
- Post length
- Capitalization
- Punctuation
- Ratio of code to not code
- Keywords that strongly identify with low quality (misspellings, etc.)
- Outcome of previous posts by this user (poor previous posts are indicators of poor future posts)
We won't get something perfect, but even if we can take an average question list from 80% low-quality to 20% low-quality that's a big win for the users who want this.
Shouldn't we be teaching people to ask better questions?
Yes! We will keep doing this via comments, reviews, and whatever site changes we can think of.
But, ultimately, I think this is just sweeping back the tide. Like it or not, people are going to ask low-quality questions. Some of them are "vampires", and some of them are just well-meaning people who don't know what they're doing (yet). This system will give some incentive to ask a high-quality question (you'll likely get a faster answer and more users will see it if it's high quality) while still allowing the askers to get answers and the answerers to get some rep.
Stack Exchange Quality Improvement Project
- Allow users to optionally filter out low-quality questions
- Feedback requested: New “recommended” homepage, phase 1
- What should the system be deleting automatically that it already isn't?
- Let's have an explicit triage system for questions from new users
- Breaking down question blocks - let's talk about rate limits