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In an attempt to improve the quality of content on the site, expediting the speedy deletion of low quality questions, while taking pressure off the community. Can we decrease the roomba times for auto deletion of some questions?

Currently Roomba is as follows (emphasis added):

If the question is more than 30 days old, and ...

  • has −1 or lower score
  • has no answers
  • is not locked

... or ...

  • it was closed and migrated to a different site

...or...

  • it was migrated from a different site, and then rejected

... it will be automatically deleted. These are termed "dead" questions (RemoveDeadQuestions, RemoveMigrationStubs in the case of a migration or RemoveRejectedMigrations in the case of a rejected migration).

If the question is more than 365 days old, and ...

  • has a score of 0 or less, or a score of 1 and a deleted owner
  • has no answers
  • is not locked
  • has view count <= the age of the question in days times 1.5
  • has 1 or 0 comments
  • isn't on a meta site

... it will be automatically deleted. These are termed "abandoned" questions (RemoveAbandonedQuestions).

These checks are run every week across all sites.

If the question was closed more than 9 days ago, and ...

  • not closed as a duplicate
  • has a score of 0 or less
  • is not locked
  • has no answers with a score > 0
  • has no accepted answer
  • has no pending reopen votes
  • has not been edited in the past 9 days

... it will be automatically deleted.

Focusing on the last condition. As a suggestion, can we append another condition?

If the question is closed/ on hold, and ...

  • not closed as a duplicate
  • has a score of -2 or less
  • is not locked
  • has no answers
  • has no pending reopen votes
  • has not been edited since closure

... it will be automatically deleted.

Or something similar.

Even better would there be much overhead to run a script on Stack Overflow that would run once a day and do this clean up? It might help to alleviate some of the pressure and frustration for the community's curators and it would certainly make the site cleaner. The worse thing that can happen is the question is edited and flagged to be undeleted. This wouldn't require much effort to moderate, as a quick review of the post would determine it's viability.

As noted in the comments and my linked answer, we need to reduce the number of close votes, but it's already been asked here Reduce the number of votes required to close a question to 4. This is an adjunct to that, and the improved UI on asking questions to assist with content clean up.

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    In what way would this "take pressure off the community"? The 'damage' will already have been done at this point. I for one usually don't care anymore once questions are closed (except when looking at the reopen queue). Jul 15, 2018 at 8:06
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    I'm not sure what benefit this would ultimately have. Having them hang around longer isn't an issue, but we do need to be able to close them quicker in the first place. I don't really care after that happens.
    – DavidG
    Jul 15, 2018 at 13:48
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    also you know that asking for changes in the site is most of the time a big "yeah, in 6 or 8 weeks". Jul 15, 2018 at 14:28
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    @pnuts will do that
    – user3956566
    Jul 15, 2018 at 14:47
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    I'm not sure whether this solves a problem we have - I may be wrong, but I doubt there are a lot of new visitors to an already-closed question with a negative score. Jul 15, 2018 at 14:58
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    @YvetteColomb err I'll pass on that one. I stopped believing that we can change something in SO mechanics, everything get denied. and there are so many suggestions to do (already done, mostly), that I'd have the impression to repeat stuff. Jul 15, 2018 at 15:43
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    Related meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/262077/…
    – Braiam
    Jul 15, 2018 at 16:57
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    Yes, but you didn't answer my question and this post, what is the benefit of deleting quicker? This site has a long term goal and the roomba assists with that. Deleting quicker will only stop reopens (which are already hard to do) and frustrate new users even more. The "make it easier to close" ideal though, is a different thing completely.
    – DavidG
    Jul 15, 2018 at 17:07
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    But the litter is already being removed. I don't understand why you think it's going to be better if it gets removed quicker.
    – DavidG
    Jul 15, 2018 at 17:15
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    @DavidG because wading through the site at times is a little like walking through a tip. Littered with low qual posts. That's my opinion. If you don't think it's a problem, that's ok. I personally do not like it
    – user3956566
    Jul 15, 2018 at 17:17
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    It doesn't feel like an argument to me, I'm trying to clarify why you think his is a good idea. I don't think it solves any of the problems you say it does and I'm fairly sure it actually causes more. Searching on newest posts will always show up closed questions, even if you roomba them after 2 hours. The only way to avoid that would be hide closed questions by default. But that's a different feature request, and maybe not a bad one as it new users wouldn't be aware of it.
    – DavidG
    Jul 15, 2018 at 17:36
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    @Viney I don't think "add the answer in the question itself" is an improvement in the question.
    – user202729
    Jul 16, 2018 at 2:09
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    @YvetteColomb What particular problem are you trying to solve with this? IIRC LQ closed question drop out of the main page and when you are looking through tag specific question lists it says closed/on hold in the title so it is pretty easy to see that you can skip it. I just don't see a real problem with having these questions around for 9 days before they are deleted. Dev time is precious and I'm just not seeing enough ROI on this to make it worth there investment. Jul 16, 2018 at 13:38
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    Sure, but once it's close it is pretty much guaranteed to be deleted. Why not just change the 9 days to 5 or 7 and work on part one of the problem which is the the bigger part, just getting the stuff closed. Jul 16, 2018 at 13:45
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    In any case, I agree with making these questions Roomba faster, especially if it was closed within a few minutes of being posted. In that case, the OP has no excuse not to edit promptly. It's a little different if it was closed days or weeks after being posted - then it's less clear that the OP was just being unresponsive. Jul 16, 2018 at 13:56

7 Answers 7

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I'm just not seeing the ROI on this. If the problem we are trying to solve is to keep the site clean then I think we should focus on step one of the cleanup process and get the low quality content closed. We can't delete it until it is closed so we might as well do that before we start tweaking how the Roomba works.

Reducing the vote count needed, giving tag badge holders more powers, stopping the low quality content from hitting the site in the first place are all initiatives I think we should focus on first. This gets things closed and allows the OPs the opportunity to improve their question(s).

After that we could look at possibly reducing 9 days to 7 or 5, or adding a new category to get especially bad content removed faster.

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    "ROI" forcing me to google from the beginning ;)
    – user3956566
    Jul 16, 2018 at 13:56
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    Agree with you completely @Nathan, though I'm still not convinced there's any benefit to removing content any faster. I personally don't ever see questions that are older than a few hours unless I'm searching for answers to my own problems, and in that case, I'd never get directed to a closed question anyway.
    – DavidG
    Jul 16, 2018 at 14:34
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    @DavidG I'm not seeing any benefit either but if we all of the sudden drastically increase the number of closed questions maybe it would be prudent to remove the worst as soon as possible. It's hard to say until we complete step one. Jul 16, 2018 at 14:41
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    I entirely agree with the sentiment. But regarding this: Reducing the vote count needed, giving tag badge holders more powers. SO has over the years declined these requests. There's no indication there'll be a turnaround. New posts with these requests are closed as duplicates and left to rot; old requests aren't resurrected.
    – jpp
    Jul 17, 2018 at 1:06
38

If the question is closed/ on hold, and ...

not closed as a duplicate has a score of -2 or less is not locked has no answers and has no pending reopen votes has not been edited since closure ... it will be automatically deleted.

This seems to imply that a question with a score of -2 and no answers would be deleted immediately upon closure. (And, equivalently, a closed question with no answers would be deleted immediately if it reached a score of -2.)

This seems bad:

  1. It would put some questions into a situation where they could be deleted before the OP ever got a chance to edit them into shape. The "no pending reopen votes and no edits since closure" conditions don't help, because there's no window for those reopen votes or edits to happen!

  2. Worse: if a question is deleted immediately upon closure, it'll "disappear" for the OP. They may never see the closure reason at all, as the question will disappear from their profile as soon as it is deleted.

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    The OP will still see the question when it's deleted.
    – user3956566
    Jul 15, 2018 at 8:42
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    Can you suggest some better parameters or are you not keen at all for the change?
    – user3956566
    Jul 15, 2018 at 8:52
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    @YvetteColomb I don't believe this change is necessary. Questions meeting a more general form of these conditions are already deleted 9 days after closure; I don't see any pressing need to accelerate that process.
    – user149341
    Jul 15, 2018 at 16:58
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    @YvetteColomb They'll be able to see it, if they know the site well enough to know that there is a specific page showing recently deleted questions and how to get there. In other words, some fairly small percentage will. They can, but many won't.
    – Servy
    Jul 16, 2018 at 13:43
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    @Servy you'd be surprised the number of people who flag their deleted posts. One thing is, an auto comment, that would alert the user and bring them to the post.
    – user3956566
    Jul 16, 2018 at 13:44
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If the question is closed/ on hold, and ...

not closed as a duplicate has a score of -2 or less is not locked has no answers and has no pending reopen votes has not been edited since closure ... it will be automatically deleted.

This is bad. As soon as an unanswered question with a score < -2 gets put on hold, it instantly gets deleted. There's barely any time for the OP to improve their question! The current condition...

If the question was closed more than 9 days ago, and ...

not closed as a duplicate has a score of 0 or less is not locked has no answers with a score > 0 has no accepted answer has no pending reopen votes has not been edited in the past 9 days ... it will be automatically deleted.

...is good enough. 9 days is an adequate window to let the OP improve their question (if possible).

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    What would you think about 2 or 3 days?
    – user3956566
    Jul 15, 2018 at 17:01
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    @YvetteColomb Nah, I hate auto-deletion. My last answer was too ranty, so I'm trying to sound just a little bit pro-roomba to farm upvotes. But in reality, I'm all against roomba!
    – clickbait
    Jul 15, 2018 at 17:03
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    I love that :) thanks for your frankness.. I understand too ranty... I'm striving for too understandy
    – user3956566
    Jul 15, 2018 at 17:06
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    I don't like Roomba either, you have my sympathies. IMO it is a very strange tool for a site that wants to be a good reference, and it kind of killed any motivation I had for posting self-answered Q/A, reminds me of the "minimum notability" factor for Wikipedia. Just not fun to deal with. "Too Localized" got removed because programmers' crystal balls weren't good enough at predicting the future, but for some reason the Roomba stayed.
    – jrh
    Jul 16, 2018 at 20:35
6
If the question is closed/ on hold, and …

not closed as a duplicate 
has a score of -2 or less
is not locked has no answers and
has no pending reopen votes 
has not been edited since closure 

... it will be automatically deleted.

The score of -2 or less part worries me.

  1. The OP may not get a chance to edit their question before it's closed.

  2. It may change people's behavior and increase downvoting simply to get a question deleted. That would change the purpose of downvoting.

Per Help Center > Privileges > Vote Down, "Use your downvotes whenever you encounter an egregiously sloppy, no-effort-expended post, or an answer that is clearly and perhaps dangerously incorrect."

Getting a question deleted without giving the OP a chance to edit it is not what downvoting is for.

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    I'm not convinced it would increase downvoting (much) - insta-delete-worthy seems worse than downvote-worthy, so if you want a question to get deleted, you'd presumably also want to downvote it (regardless of whether that will delete it). If anything, it might make people downvote less, and upvote more, to prevent questions from getting deleted (and that I'd actually agree seems like a pretty significant problem). Jul 16, 2018 at 10:52
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Understandably in my opinion there seems some doubt (eg) about whether we have an issue that might be ameliorated by this suggestion. No doubt the site is full of junk (eg just discovered one Q with hundreds of marked dupes, and 723,807 Closed Qs). However deleting Qs more quickly might make very little improvement hence efforts be better expended on other activity.

But data to assess the merit of this suggestion is lacking – and I suspect could be difficult to obtain. Nowadays broad SEDE queries often seem to fail to complete because of the time limit and a comprehensive picture may need to take into account inaccessible, or relatively inaccessible, deleted Qs.

The relevant data may include indication of the effectiveness of deletion other than through Roomba and the view count development over time. For the former the VTD count over time would also seem relevant. And perhaps tracking at least the quantity (because their quality is judgemental) of edits during the deletion process ref).

A minor mitigating consideration is that Qs asked more than say 4 years ago might be ignorable for analysis purposes, in view of changes in interpretation of on/off topic.

We do though have some data that seems pertinent. Moderator tools, Delete votes, Most Votes for 30d at present shows only one 1 Q with more than one VTD. It is approaching 50,000 views (net +187) and is a Community wiki dating back to April 2009.

Clearly no sign of a significant problem in the last 30 days once a couple of delete votes have been cast on a Q (since more than 3 votes is very rarely required for a relatively recent Q).

There is a SEDE query that also focuses on Qs when one VTD short of deletion. Being SEDE it is not fully up-to-the-minute but lists a mere 26 Qs. It seems 2 of these have since been deleted, 2 are locked, 1 is a 'special case'. So net a mere 21, of which 5 will not accept delete votes anyway. These are the remaining 16: 150743, 14753048, 16180745, 18190714, 24749009, 25233411, 25832014, 28724672, 30170465, 32404517, 33287588, 33762842, 34020362, 36923762, 48335157, 48946454 and, knowing meta, I would not bet on their now having much life expectancy.

So once near to deletion there appears to me to be little to worry about.

What about the first VTD? I have no idea how many Qs are in that state but would be wary of any automation that reads too much into a single VTD (consider audits in review queues for example!). Mechanistic intervention can go wrong and it seems sensible to incorporate human judgement in the deletion process, and not rely on a single user. (Otherwise "Close" might as well be termed and treated as "Delete").

Pending relevant and reliable statistics, I say "leave well alone".

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    I suggest using less abbreviations, it makes it hard to read. At the very least introduce the abbreviation on first use, for the benefit of people not that familiar with them.
    – Passer By
    Jul 16, 2018 at 10:23
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    Just an idea: run a query to get the view counts of questions asked in the last day that this might delete, and then run a similar query a week later to get the updated view counts (and check that the questions are still closed, and how votes changed) - diff these against each other to give you a count of how many views this feature would've "saved", which is a rough estimate of how beneficial implementing this might be. One should probably also check how many questions got reopened during that time, to quantify the drawback of implementing this. Jul 16, 2018 at 11:26
  • @pnuts Something like that. Edits alone might not mean much if the edit wasn't good enough to warrant reopening - some manual inspection of edits might be good, assuming edits are common enough for it to make a non-negligible difference. Jul 16, 2018 at 11:49
0

I think that some of this could depend on exactly when the question was closed. There are definitely cases where questions in smaller tags will be closed days after they were posted. In some cases (e.g. burnination, tag cleanup) questions will be closed months or even years after they were posted. In these cases, it's a little less clear that it's the OP's fault for not editing sooner (although you could argue that they should've formulated the question properly in the first place so that it wouldn't have been closed at all).

I have a lot less sympathy in cases where the question was closed shortly after it was created (e.g. within a few minutes). In those cases, the OP has no excuse not to edit promptly, so if they make no effort to improve the question within a reasonable time-frame it's their own fault. Given that they should be sticking around to respond to comments anyway, there's no reason that they need the full 9 days to edit.

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    Perhaps add the changing scope of the site over the years, as that's beyond the OP's help
    – user3956566
    Jul 16, 2018 at 14:06
-3

Closed questions don't need to get deleted so quickly because I do not believe that the number of "closed/on hold" questions is a problem.

  • People can ignore them quite easily.
  • Leaving a question around for a while gives a novice a chance to discover the comments and edit the question into shape.
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    @pnuts Yes, I understood that. I don't agree with the OP. Jul 16, 2018 at 10:51
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    @pnuts To me it was pretty clear that the answer was referring to the deletion of closed questions, although I edited it to make that more explicit. Jul 16, 2018 at 11:12
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    @pnuts Well, there's another answer on +26/-2 which says roughly the same thing, so it seems there were a lot of interpretations similar to yours, people were just pile-on voting or it's more an issue of the arguments made in each answer rather than the bottom line. Jul 16, 2018 at 11:18
  • @pnuts I think it's because it was an answer that read like a comment, before the edit. I considered downvoting it for that reason and then decided against it, as it does no harm. It's an opinion like the others, but with no added value.
    – user3956566
    Jul 17, 2018 at 3:18
  • @pnuts agree, that's exactly why I didn't downvote it. I didn't downvote any others, upvoted two. Because I didn't downvote the other answers saying similar things, it would have been confusing in terms of - well how is this idea different to the others? I'm not sure if I'm explaining myself well
    – user3956566
    Jul 17, 2018 at 7:34
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    @pnuts ah, I understand
    – user3956566
    Jul 17, 2018 at 7:45

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