I just saw the question SQL error: #1271 - Illegal mix of collations for operation 'UNION' bumped to the home page by the Community User. I looked at the revision history and it has been bumped 11 (eleven) times — once a month between June 2016 and April 2017 — with little obvious effect.
Why is this question so important to the Community User that it deserves this many attempts to gain attention? Shouldn't the Community User accept that there is no interest in the question?
The OP could post their solution as a self-answer and accept it; that might improve things and stop the bumping. But there's little incentive for anyone else to do a thing about it. Creating a Community Wiki answer doesn't mean anybody would notice or that it would be accepted. (The OP is still around; they were seen yesterday, so not all hope is lost.)
Although Bumped by Community User has useful information in Stijn's answer, and it does explain the general mechanics of the Community User bumping questions, it doesn't completely explain why this particular question got select once a month for 11 months, more or less like clockwork.
As I noted in a comment below, I'm surprised that there aren't a lot of other questions eligible for bumping. If only one question an hour gets this treatment, in 30 days * 24 hours there are 720 questions bumped. It is surprising to me that any question gets bumped on a monthly basis — I would expect the pool of candidates to be much bigger. There are over 13M questions asked on SO. If I were very optimistic, I might guess that 0.01% of those might be eligible for bumping; that's a pool of 1300 questions … maybe it isn't so odd if my percentage is right. I suspect that the percentage of eligible questions is an order or two of magnitude large, so it is more surprising that this particular question was selected routinely. There are other as yet undocumented factors at play here.
This question is now unlikely to be rebumped; the one answer has a couple of up-votes, which should stop it being eligible for bumping.
But the questions remain:
- How big is the pool of candidate questions?
- What are the other criteria that control the order in which the bumped questions are chosen?
- Was there something unusual about this question that meant it got the 'routine bump' treatment?
- How many other questions get similar 'routine bumping' treatment?
Other example 'monthly bumper' questions
I've just come across another 'monthly bumper' question:
How to insert into a table using stored procedures in DB2 using SQL? — revision history.
This has been bumped monthly since May 2016, for a total of 12 times.
Faulting module path:
C:\Windows\system32\KERNELBASE.dll
— revision history.
This has been bumped monthly since June 2016, for a total of 11 times. This example was found by Hans Passant and noted in his comment below.
SEDE Query - Bumped by Community User (more than 5 times)
The questions identified above are not an isolated phenomenon. I've created a SEDE (Stack Exchange Data Explorer) query with the title Bumped by Community User (more than 5 times). The results list over 2700 questions that have been bumped more than five times by the Community User.
For a given ID number, such as 1069184, you can link to the revision history using:
The filter should, perhaps, be enhanced to eliminate those questions that would not be selected any more. But it gives a first pass answer at some of my questions.
Another SEDE query, Number of Questions Bumped N Times by Community User gives the number of questions bumped 2, 3, … 12 times. At the moment, that yields:
Times Bumped Number of Questions
3 313
4 276
5 299
6 207
7 193
8 179
9 171
10 379
11 1606
12 32
The other query doesn't show counts of 3, 4, 5. However, it is fairly clear that one of the comments from Stijn's answer (see above) is not wholly accurate. The list above shows 3,623 questions bumped 3 or more times.
The Community User will only bump a maximum of one question per hour.
There are many more questions bumped than that rate suggests. Either the bumping didn't start in May 2016, or there is another factor (such as principal tag) involved in deciding which questions are bumped.
You can also look at SEDE queries: