I've been using Stack Overflow for most of the private beta. Since the site went to public beta on Monday, I have detected a distinct decline in the level of civility. Some of this is due to new users coming in and posting spam and other nonsense, but the offtopic and downvote buttons are doing a pretty good job of keeping this under control.

Unfortunately, a lot of this is coming from more experienced users, and the site's built-in moderation system is not (and probably cannot) handle this very well. Folks are rushing to pound new users down with "this belongs on meta!", "this is offtopic", "this is a duplicate!" and "read the FAQ!". All this, of course, is accompanied by a flurry of downvotes. This is not very welcoming to new users who don't know about meta, or what is offtopic, or the unofficial FAQ.

Now I am not proposing that we just allow offtopic, meta, or duplicate questions. However, I think we could be gentler in the way we express these sorts of things. Explain what meta and the unofficial FAQ are and provide useful links. Just using please and thank-you when asking folks to read the FAQ or post something on meta would be an improvement. I also think we could rein in the downvoting a bit. Not that we shouldn't vote stuff down, but unless a new user's post is clearly spam, voting it down to -1 or -2 should be sufficient to send a message without piling on.

I like Stack Overflow and I want it to become a resource for everyone, not just an elitist site for people who were in the private beta.

Edited to add: Exhibit A for what I'm talking about (and what inspired me to actually post this) is this question here. A guy asked the reasoning behind a design decision and he gets voted down into oblivion, called stupid and a whiner, and one person even flagged his question as offensive. Honestly, I wouldn't even vote his post down. A quick explanation and a link to the FAQ would suffice.

Above link is only visible to users with 10k rep on Stack Overflow, anyone care to find another good example that everyone can see? I need proof before I believe that SO has "leveled" yet again, all jerks have not suddenly been enlightened, or have they?

Return to FAQ index

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Well, the status on that uservoice request has changed to "started" so hopefully they'll have it fixed soon. – Chris Upchurch Sep 16 '08 at 18:24
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I wonder if we will get the rep back we lost? I know I lost 200 points... and that really sucks. – GEOCHET Sep 16 '08 at 18:31
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The links to that information should be better displayed, and perhaps displayed more often. – Brad Gilbert Sep 16 '08 at 21:17
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This is why I've suggested having comments for when things are voted down. That way people get helpful hints instead of just the big minus sign. Unfortunately, the suggestion was declined by management. :( – Kyralessa Sep 16 '08 at 21:21
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For starters, let's stop using the derogatory term "noobs"? – Ates Goral Oct 17 '08 at 14:39
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Rolled back to "noobs". The term is used in our field and I don't think anyone takes it particularly offensively. Tired of political correctness everywhere. – Simucal Feb 16 '09 at 2:04
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I totally agree, I've caught wind of this myself and I’ve only been here two weeks. It takes a lot to not attack back via comments. This “decline in the level of civility” can lead to very large nonsense/bickering comment chains. – NTDLS Feb 21 '09 at 5:16
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I know. I had posted a question for why there are more men programmers than women programmers and it was not only closed but marked offensive. I dropped from 500 to 400. If my rep. was 10k no one would mark my ques. as offensive. Ques. like 'offshore developers are not good' are not seen offensive! – RCB - IPL Mar 15 '09 at 6:52
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I've always thought that we programmers tend to be a little bit arrogant. Maybe it comes with the binary numerical system understanding – victor hugo May 10 '09 at 19:27
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The beatings will continue until morale improves? – sparks May 12 '09 at 23:56
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This is typical. Someone designs and creates a system (StackOverflow) that fails to take into account the nature of human beings, and then someone (in this case, you) criticises the humans for just being themselves and not adapting to the flaws of the system. – Timwi May 13 '09 at 0:40
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This post belongs on use voice... It's not programming related. – Omar Kooheji Jun 1 '09 at 8:20
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@mcandre: where in the manifesto is that true: [This is a place for specific, complex questions] That's your personal wish for this place, just as my personal wish for this place is somewhere between experts-exchange and slashdot. Guess what, neither of us are going to get what we want, but IMHO, if we were closer to my vision, we get a better tool all-around and not just some silo to your ego of eliteness. – darthcoder Aug 18 '09 at 18:23
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@speeder: @gerryLowry: did either of you read the FAQ? – John Saunders Feb 18 '10 at 4:52
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I find so ironic that this post has been "protected" against newbies... – yms Apr 24 '11 at 22:37
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Jul 27 '09 at 10:57

This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers.

protected by Tim Post Feb 19 '11 at 11:22

This question is protected to prevent "thanks!", "me too!", or spam answers by new users. To answer it, you must have earned at least 10 reputation on this site.

69 Answers

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While I agree, there are a few points to note:

  • 1 upvote clears the rep cost of several downvotes.
  • New users need to learn and those with the "mod" class rep levels simply don't have time to hand-hold all the new users.
  • I (and we) always take "n00bism" into account before smashing down (I tend to favour closing if possible to save them rep).
  • The up/down vote system is not just about rep, it is the quality control mechanism for Stack Overflow.
  • On the welcome page and the FAQ it clearly states everything that you have mentioned.

Now, like I said, we should take it into account. But the fact remains, the up/down vote system is the core of how we get the "good stuff" up and the "bad stuff" down. It is not designed to be a personal attack against the users in question.

Looking at "exhibit A"..

  • It's not offensive.
  • I don't even think it really belongs on uservoice. I would have commented and closed it.
  • I would not have voted down due to the fact that it is a valid question and not really covered by the official faq (the "unofficial faq" really pisses me off, that should not have survived private beta for this very reason).
  • The abusive responses are not helpful, I have modded them down, and everyone else should have done the same.

Can we please remember that we are supposed to be adults, we are supposed to be problem-solvers by trade. So, can we try to apply some brain cells to things please?

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The closing is a much larger slap in the face than a downvote IMO. You should be using this power as sparingly as possible. – GEOCHET Sep 16 '08 at 18:44
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I disagree, a comment outlining why it as closed and suggestions on how to make it appropriate is good for two reasons. 1. It stops them getting slammed by other users. 2. It stops a flame war starting and helps the whole process move on. – Rob Cooper Sep 16 '08 at 18:47
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"1 upvote clears the rep cost of several downvotes." While I think this is a good design decision, I wonder how many noobs realize this. A lot of them are probably freaking out at their question being at -5 not realizing that the one upvote meant they had no net loss of rep. – Chris Upchurch Sep 16 '08 at 20:21
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I recommend some type of cookie-cutter response that we can just copy-and-paste depending on the mistake made. For example:

"This type of question is considered a 'poll' and is outside Stack Overflow's scope. Please rephrase the question so that it can be answered definitively or it will be closed."

...or something like that. I think that the moderators on javaranch.com do something similar when their newbies break the rules.

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This is a good idea. – GEOCHET Sep 16 '08 at 18:26
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LOL! I was doing this for ages during private beta, it just got me downmodded! I have several snippets that I used in Google Notebook for easy access! – Rob Cooper Sep 16 '08 at 21:17
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The wording of your example is still too harsh in my opinion. The frequently highly negative reactions of newbie Wikipedians to messages with similar purpose and tone is a case in point. – Michael Ratanapintha Nov 19 '08 at 5:39
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I recommend some type of cookie-cutter response that we can just copy-and-paste depending on the mistake made.

I agree with Outlaw Programmer, but would add that it would be useful if there was a menu or similar to quickly (and politely) allow "problem post" identification.

For example, if you see that a post is a duplicate, you hit a button, enter the URL/ID of the post duplicated. Successive viewers can then agree or disagree. The question poster will get a canned and polite notification.

So instead of templating being a burden on individual users, have it be a function of the system for the most common problem posts.

Offhand, those seem to be:

  • Duplicate
  • Belongs in uservoice
  • Offtopic
  • Not a question
  • Unclear question (not enough detail to respond, etc.)
  • ...More as post requirements develop

In essence this would be a votable, post classification tag.

Quick and painless for advanced users... just choose the classification from a list of canned ones, or vote up the existing classification(s) if you agree.

It would be friendly and helpful to the new(er)bies. They would see "15 people think this post belongs in the uservoice section. Do you want to move it there?" or "107 people think you should probably add more detail to your question. Edit now?"

shrug

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Here are a couple of requests on UserVoice.com

Provide clear and solid guidelines for SO users [declined]

Formulate and publish moderation policy [completed]

Admin response

... if site behaviors are not self-evident, we have failed....

Jeff,

Maybe it's time to acknowledge that users need clean guidelines?

If people keep asking such questions, maybe you really failed to explain what Stack Overflow is.

How can this be obvious?:

so

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what is is according to the designers' intent and what it will become based on community usage may be two very different things. Let it evolve for a while before pruning the shoots, it's only been two days! – Steven A. Lowe Sep 18 '08 at 3:40
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I noticed a decline in civility during the beta. It seems like a few of the "old-timers" (who have been here for weeks) don't like people joining their sandbox.

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@Everyone: Yes, some people forget they had a first day too, and they learned there knowledge from somewhere and weren't born with it – Chris Mar 25 '09 at 13:48
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I'm a newbie and a few days ago I asked How many reputation points do I need to do X?, At this point I had already read the FAQ, browsed by the page and even answered a couple of questions.

I still get a canned "Try looking at the FAQ here".

Having read the FAQ I felt a little bad, until someone else clarified that there is an "Unofficial FAQ".

I think that there should be a really big (or at least the same size as the other ones) link to a real FAQ which includes all the information in the Unofficial FAQ.

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I definitely believe this is a problem. I recommended this site to my sister recently. She is an inexperienced programmer, and her project director switched them from Visual Studio to Borland mid-project. She has a master's degree in mathematics, and has only taken 1-2 college level programming classes, but has been added onto a programming project as one of her tours in the entry level program of her department. She was struggling with some of the differences between the two development environments. She did find some help on certain Borland sites, but had been largely at a loss for some of the errors she was running into. That's when I sent her here.

I've been following SO since Jeff started talking about it on coding horror. I have to confess I am more lurker/observer than anything else. I was extremely pleased at how quickly questions were answered, and she joined up on my recommendation.

Her first question was almost immediately attacked as being homework, while also being voted down and criticized for its format. While some of the reasoning (expect the homework stuff) was accurate, the method in which it was presented was wholly inappropriate, especially for a new user. She was almost immediately turned off by the responses, and felt like she should return to her forum resources.

Thankfully, a few long time users came by, ANSWERED HER QUESTION, and encouraged her to keep participating. They redeemed both her opinion and my own about the site. There was a night and day difference between how the users, who basically took the same actions in showing her a better way to ask the question, responded.

While I definitely believe we need to be using up/down votes as they are intended, if members can't be respectfully helpful to new users, we need some new way of communicating the proper way to use the website.

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Maybe Jeff and Joel could put together a video tutorial explaining how Stack Overflow works and explaining some of the do's and don'ts.

From seeing a video of Joel giving a presentation of FogBugz and listening to the podcast I imagine they could make it humorous enough that people would watch the whole thing and informative enough that they could raise the level of n00bism here.

Update:
In fact, I think it's such a good idea that I've made a uservoice suggestion for creating a tutorial video.

and it's been declined: "if the site isn't somewhat self-evident, we have failed -- video or not"

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> it's been declined: "if the site isn't somewhat self-evident, we have failed -- video or not" And yet... there are training videos for FogBugz. – Ether Aug 27 '09 at 3:21
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This is not very welcoming to new users who don't know about uservoice, or what is offtopic, or the unofficial FAQ.

How can we explain this to them when having discussions in the "answers" area is strongly discouraged? I say let 'em find out what this site is. It doesn't take long. And if getting voted down makes someone cry, then he shouldn't use this site at all (or Digg or Reddit or ...).

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When you vote something down add a comment, why you've voted it down. This keeps the voting and tells the user, what he did wrong. – Yaba Sep 16 '08 at 20:17
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**

UPDATED THIS POST

I, being a n00b myself, didn't realize there was already a system called Badges (yes, I see the big button up top, I just hadn't gotten around to investigating it). Below is my original suggestion, but now that I know there is already a badges system implemented...

I suggest we extend Badges to incorporate tests on various subject matters, instead of just auto-generated values, as it does now. Just like real boy-scout badges. Learn how to tie a knot, take the knot tying test, get a badge. Read the FAQ, take the FAQ test, get a badge.

Simple!

(read below for a wordier way of saying the same thing)

**

Implement a n00b training and rating system as part of the user account. When a person makes a new account they start out as a n00b, with a score of 0. If they want to increase that score, they have to take tests. The score on the test advances your n00b score. There are multiple tests in different topic areas, and the various tests are weighted differently.

For example, there could be a test about basic site navigation. It could be a low valued test, so even if you get a 100% score on the test, it only boosts your n00b level a little.

Another test could be proving you know the answers from the various FAQs. This could be a medium weighted score.

Another test could be proving you know how the various social systems work, and what socially acceptable behaviour is. It would help to have a "coding standard" type document that covers this, so that people who don't just "get it" can learn it.

This kind of system is already in place on a lot of forum softwares, but they rate the users on how many posts, giving them various levels of experience, starting at n00b and ending at SysOp (or Admin for you youngsters).

This will be an additional rating system to reputation, and it's opt-in. Reputation is socially controlled. User experience level is something you can learn and test your way to success with, whether anyone likes what you have to say or not.

In this way, you can prove that you've read the faq, and understand it enough to answer the questions in the test, and get the appropriate "scout badge". That way, when people are answering your questions, they know at what level to start.. A respondant might think "Should I mention the FAQ to this guy?.. Oh, no, I see he's read the FAQ already, and he's still asking this question. Let me think about it a little deeper, or see if the FAQ is ambiguous or lacking in content." etc..

I think a system like that would be very cool. You could even have technical topic area "certifications" that can contribute to that... So a user can prove that they know what the heck they are talking about in c++ or Win32 COM programming. The tests could be user generated, and people could add new ones, evolving the site as it goes on.

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If lots of people are asking the same questions about SO, then that's potentially a usability problem.

And if lots of people are asking (and answering) poll-type questions, then that is apparently an interesting use-case.

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I think there is this inherent fear--perhaps a subconscious one learned after spending time on Digg, Reddit, Hacker News, and other similar community-run sites--of a flood of new users decreasing the quality of posts on a site like this. If anything such a fear dates back all the way to the Eternal September of Usenet, back in 1993.

This fear leads to an overreaction when people see what they think are junk questions posted by newer users--whether the questions are simply offtopic, or perhaps trollish or ignorant, or perhaps highly subjective. People are afraid of the quality of the site being ruined by such things, and whether justified or not, they break out the downvotes in droves.

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Disagree.

We've all been noobs, as superwiren stated, that's certainly true.

But there's a correct way to be a noob, and a wrong way.

When you visit a new place, you should spend some time just looking around and absorbing the culture. That way, you'll learn how to behave in (local) community. When you ask the first question or give a first answer, you'll do it the right way.

The other way is to start dancing fandango in a crowded metro. Generally, this is somehow frowned upon.

Many commenters are forgetting that for every noob that doesn't know how to behave there are ten of the first sort. Kudos to them! And to show them that we appreciate them, we should scream at the latter sort even more loudly!

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I am a noob. I've been registered for less than 24 hours after finding SO on Reddit, and I've been impressed with both the level of civility and usefulness of many of the questions and answers. I'm also very intrigued by the reputation system and the inventiveness of the site's designers in trying to design a system that keeps up the site's quality and doesn't let it devolve into something like Digg.

Both of these things encouraged me to try to engage with the site (in spite of the OpenID painfulness) vs. just lurk and go away. I have 63 mod points now, so I don't think the 15-point up-vote hurdle is too high at all if a dumbass like me can pass it.

In short, from the noob perspective I don't think there's a big problem, but I do appreciate Chris' advice that you all be nice to us (except for the cretins with the how do I use Windows questions). The system is complicated enough that the real aka "unofficial" FAQ really needs to be linked to in the menu (as levhita suggests), not the useless one (or merge the two).

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I disagree. Voting down should be used judiciously but I think it's still important that it be used. I think the system already has enough built in protections in this regard. Down votes are costly to the voter (-1 rep) and have only a small effect on the rep of the target (-2 rep).

Not to pick on the author of the given example, but take a look at his user page. He's posted 1 question and 1 answer. His answer has 0 net votes and his question has -5 net down votes. Yet he has, just now, 47 total rep (which, incidentally, is enough to allow him to vote answers up or down, per his complaint/question). Given this I think it's a bit ridiculous to say that people voting his question down represents "being hard on him".

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Post first, ask questions later.

Maybe users should have to post an answer before they can post a question. Then they would have had to start using the site before they post bad questions.

I would almost go so far as to require users to post more answers than questions. Because as far as I can tell anyone who actually uses this site has answered more questions than they have asked.

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If someone is a beginner (at programming), then it will probably be quite hard for them to first post an answer before they are allowed to ask questions. – M4N Jan 22 '09 at 22:35
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To try and reduce the number of "belongs on uservoice" and "read the FAQ" questions I've suggested that the uservoice link should be more prominent on the Ask Question page

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I am a newbie myself, I really like the idea around the site, reputation-based is really great and fun and makes it like something of a Wiki2.0 in my opinion.There is just one thing that annoys me a bit. I saw a couple newbies heavily downvoted without any answer or explanation. While this has not yet happened to me personally, i can imagine how frustrating this is. What about downvotes requiring mandatory comment? Now I agree that 'RTFM' would be enough of a comment - still it would definitively look less cowardly.

If you dont agree... well ... Weapons Free ;)

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It's also nice to give a reason when upvoting. Both positive and negative feedback will help to improve the quality of questions and answers on SO. – Noel Walters Jan 27 '09 at 19:12
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I have to agree, although I've probably been short with a few, but how hard is it to search before you ask? I marked at least 8 posts as duplicates in just the last 2 hours.

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Your logic depends on the accuracy of search. I asked a question in the search box, came up with nothing even close, then posted the question. Later I found that there were similar answers, but the search left something to be desired. – mike511 Sep 17 '08 at 3:13
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Certainly during the beta phase, the search was completely useless. Maybe we should stop blaming users for creating duplicates and start asking why the software does not work better to let people find what they are looking for? – John Channing Sep 27 '08 at 9:32
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I'm a noob(ish) and I read the FAQ before I asked anything. I think RTFM is a reasonable request. I didn't come here to be spoon-fed.

This site is quite intuitive and there aren't any challenging new concepts to learn about how it operates so there is really not much excuse, apart from laziness, to use it as it is intended to be used.

Having said that, there's no excuse for rudeness. A simple "Please Read the FAQ" should suffice.

If that doesn't work there's always justfuckinggoogleit.com/

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I know I stopped dead in my tracks when I noticed that to post anything on uservoice I had to create yet another user account and that I couldn't even use my openid like I could on stackoverflow.

I mean if the websites are so closely related wouldn't it make sense for them to behave in the same manner or even better to actually share the same user system ?

As it stands asking a question on uservoice is more difficult than asking one on SO and many people discover SO directly and only see uservoice later (if they even do). Given that, is it so surprising that people go for the easiest and just post their questions on SO ?

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The growth of the community depends upon new users. New users to test the waters, grow the fields of discussion. I posted something I knew to be off-topic and got slammed. For new users, perhaps there should be a lower limit to the times any one question or comment can be down-voted. A reputation that was built in three days was destroyed in less than 5 minutes; just from trying to feel out the limits.

Obviously, the site isn't entirely programming but, if a question edges too far from this it gets raped.

Being pretentious, snobby, mean, and generally negative is not a way to build a helpful community.

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I just found this discussion right after being 'downed' at 'uservoice' question...

Hmm... I can express some feelings after this all:

  1. Being noob here doesn't mean being noob in computing and communities. It should be not a requirement to "lurk first - participate later". This is what noobs very often hear from nerds and pseudo-elites. Good site must accept anyone with positive mind from the first minute. And yes, normally 'lurking' applies to the sites with close-minded jerkish societies, which I hope is not a case here.

  2. It would be nice just to forbid down-voting newbe, especially when he has low reputation points yet.

  3. Yes, just a hint (in form of tags) would be nice to point newbe to right direction.

  4. Noob, just came to the site, sees questions-discussions-polls like "What the best features of X are" with high votes, and thinks this is legal on this site.

  5. I don't think this site is designed for elite members, so you should be more polite and forgiving to new members. Normally communities tend to be extending and this, I think, is a main goal. Otherwise so many noobs will leave your site for ever.

  6. Voting system isn't very well designed, you should admit it and try to make it even better. Sometimes noobs may give you good advise. (Sometimes - may not).

  7. There's something to do with question votes. I'm afraid, some people don't even realize that this is not a polling counter. :)

  8. Thank you for your attention.

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@Thevs: It is not easy to express yourself in a foreign language, and it takes courage. You did very well. – Mike Dunlavey Mar 23 '09 at 12:04
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@Mike: Thank you for understanding. I think my English writing style says much about me, even if grammar is Ok. :) – Thevs Mar 25 '09 at 12:00
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Note to some of us:

Some coders are childish and uncivil, as if what we're doing in this business is so darn important that shaming others is justified when we're even mildly annoyed.

You may disagree with someone. You may feel that they have stupidly blundered into the path of your high-speed expertise. But ask yourself:

  • Are they a bad person?

  • Have you never done something stupid?

  • Have you appreciated a helping hand?

We live in a world where some people murder other people over their beliefs. If someone has so much in common with you as to ask you a question, even if it's not a very smart question, do they deserve to be slammed? If you were asking, would you deserve it?

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Shouldn't down votes require a comment? I believe this would not only make the intent clear, but would also make down voting more of a task than a thoughtless click of the mouse.

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-1 you suck. ...I jest, it's a good idea :) – Zeus May 8 '09 at 8:26
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Remember, we have all been n00bs. It has never hurt anyone to be polite.

On the other hand you would expect new (and old) users to do a little investigation before posting, and trying to see if the question already exists somewhere.

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"... we have all been n00bs..." Incorrect. Jon Skeet. – Wayne Koorts Jun 26 '09 at 10:26
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@Wayne, nope. Jon's first answer includes a signature, and his first question is a poll. Granted, those things weren't against the rules back then, but... still. – Popular Demand Feb 15 '11 at 20:14
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I would hide the numbers. Even videogames are better when they don't show all the stats. Replace them with a colored ball or some more "logarithmic" numbers, if you must.

Now, "one-week-old-timers", feel free to mod this down, like someone just did to a couple of other "2-days-younger-than-old-timers" in this very thread.

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Why not offer the option to vote up/down a user's demonstrated courtesy? That should clean this whole thing up pretty quickly.

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I know. I had posted a question for why there are more men programmers than women programmers and it was not only closed but marked offensive. For that ques. I got -11 votes and -6 offensive. I dropped from 500 to 400. If my rep. was 10k no one would mark my ques. as offensive.

Questions like 'offshore developers are not competitive' are not seen as offensive.

Why men programmers are more than women programmers sound offensive to someone when questions like 'offshore developers are not competitive' do not. Saying that offshore developers are not competitive could even be looked at as a racist point of view. You may argue all you like that how offshore developers aren't that good, and it's a fact according to you, but is it also not a fact that 'there are more men programmers than women programmers'?

So this offshoring question gets 20 vote ups and my qurstions score -11 on votes and -6 on offensive points and I get rewarded with a -100 for an "interesting thought and a question". thats SO double standard for you!

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What was the title of the question? "Why are there more men programmers than women programmers?" – mmyers Apr 22 '09 at 17:49
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Here is another very-new-noob who is experiencing (at least moderately) this same thing. I started by just wanting to be helpful. Then after realizing that I need rep to post comments, I started focusing on unanswered questions, hoping to get up-voted for helpful answers.

It seems like some people ask a question, then just forget to vote for any answers at all. Ive even started learning concepts on the fly, to try and answer questions that I previously had no knowledge of. (LINQ for example). I think I will stop trying this though.

Ive done my best to follow the rules, make my posts meaningful and helpful, and not repost what others have already said (even though I have on a few occasions).

As of right now the ONLY vote I have is a down-vote on an answer I provided that, at the time, I thought was a perfectly acceptable answer.

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