Today I saw an article from Medium on Reddit complaining about Stack Overflow. I looked up the questions mentioned in the article and most of them were indeed closed before being answered. I've linked the questions below.
The general thrust of the article is recognizable. Close votes serve to clean up the site and make it more presentable to Google. But to those who participate in a question, a close vote feels like a rude interruption by nazi moderators.
This is especially true for new users. After all, in the real world it is unimaginably rude for a third person to step into a conversation and stop it.
Is there a way to reduce this misalignment? Perhaps closing could be more of a hint, that still allows votes, new comments, and answers, but does reduce the question's front page / search engine visibility? That way, the close votes would still accomplish their goal, while inflicting far less collateral damage.
Links here:
Post on reddit: Is Stack Overflow overrun by trolls?
Article on Medium: The decline of Stack Overflow
Asking noob questions is very much frowned upon
Question: How can I get rid of the `this` keyword in local functions?
Of those thousands of privileged users, many rule their virtual fiefdoms like the pettiest of Führers
Question: Fast database access test from .NET
This is where you’re told to go to with any complaints you may have about Stack Overflow, but the problem is possibly even worse over there.
Question: Does Stack Overflow have any way of preventing vote trolls?
I guess any question could be considered off-topic on Stack Overflow if only enough privileged trolls vote to get it closed.
Question: Angle between points?
All questions linked were closed shortly after being posted
. False. "Angle between points?" was closed because it had no code. "Fast database access test from .NET" was closed 11 days later, and was then re-opened by another mod. "How can I get rid of thethis
keyword in local functions?" was closed 5 hours later after much discussion, and re-opened a few days later. Only one was closed shortly, and that's because it wasn't a programming question.