Admittedly I promised myself to stay clean of the inherently difficult recent discussions regarding deletion of questions (e.g. Question deletions are getting out of hand and The Great Question Deletion Audit of 2010, but alas ;)
Being 'hit' again another time by answering an old question only to observe it being deleted shortly thereafter I wonder about the moderation rationale/policy regarding this, I presume it works like so:
- Somebody (i.e. me in this case, see the Google Cache in case you lack the reputation) answers/comments/edits an old question.
- This triggers the question to be 'active' and consequently attention by high reputation users and/or moderators.
- They look at it, wondering what the fuzz about this old one might be and decide to vote for deletion (or delete it right away).
Now, in principle this is fine with me, as mentioned I do not want to discuss whether or not to delete etc., but:
- Any casual user might be quite surprised why his activity triggers deletion, while other related and often pretty similar questions stay untouched and prominently visible while puzzling around still. To continue on the example there are several low quality questions linked as related that might be candidates for deletion too then, e.g.:
- Granted, the question I provided an answer for might have had a somewhat more offensive tone (the author appended a disclaimer though), but I think the well reasoned answers provided there do actually deliver more value than several of those to the questions mentioned above, YMMV of course.
- Again, I'm not opposing the deletion, just questioning the chain of events and decision transparency.
So I wonder: Shouldn't responsible/sensible deletion of (old) questions imply looking at related ones too?
I don't want to judge on or even ask for anybodys time allocation, but I'd think having a quick peak at related questions while voting for or performing a deletion should be quite fast and actually benefit the very intent of the actor, shouldn't it? This could improve fairness, transparency and, not the least, the quality of the sites content even further, IMHO.