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Thank you all for voicing your feedback and your concerns regarding the test of the Reactions feature.

We would like first to give some additional background surrounding the intentions around this feature, and make things more clear than they were in the first post: Finding a way to allow users to say “thank you” without using a comment is something that we do want to address through this feature. But beyond that goal, this feature is also intended to provide an alternative way for users to express their appreciation for the efforts of other users, using a paradigm that is familiar to them from other sites on the Internet.

Admittedly, this is a feature that may not appeal to some users and may find more adoption among those who have less experience on Stack Overflow. That said, we do want to make sure that if it is adopted, it will be done so in a way that will maximize benefit across the site, while preventing any negative effects to existing network practices and norms.

To address some concerns that were voiced thus far: Voting and its proper use as a means of giving feedback continues to be extremely important. This feature (in any way that it may eventually manifest itself) is not intended to replace voting or lessen its use, and a large amount of our analysis after the test will be aimed at ensuring this.

To that end, here are some of the things that we are monitoring during the test, and that we intend on analyzing after the test is concluded:

  • How has the introduction of the “thanks” reaction impacted voting?
  • How has the introduction of the “thanks” reaction impacted commenting?
  • How has the introduction of the “thanks” reaction impacted other actions (e.g. asking, answering, editing)?
  • What types of users are most likely to leave “thanks” comments? Do we see a reduction in “thank you” comments from users who have the “thanks” reaction?
  • When would users typically use a reaction versus voting?
  • How often do users upvote multiple answers on one question and is this affected by the “thanks”?
  • How many reactions overlap the post creator saying thanks for someone suggesting an improvement to their post - "Thanks for your comment, I've clarified that point"
  • How many meet the one-flag deletion RegEx
  • How many comments that include "thanks" are the sort that both says "thanks" but also ask for clarification or states an issue with the answer? These are valid comments. E.g. "Thanks for helping out with this - I'm not able to get it working, is there a step I'm missing, here are the new results I'm getting"
  • How many comments are paired with upvotes vs not?

We have seen and are cataloging the feedback and suggestions given already relating to ways and reasons that this feature might or might not work in achieving its goals. And we are keeping an open mind about functionality here — the current manifestation of the feature (including even the two images currently being tested) is in no way final. Ideas related to experimenting with the placement of the button or prompting users to give an upvote if they give a reaction without voting are great. Please keep them coming!

We are also considering ways to allow appreciation that is given (through reactions or otherwise) to be surfaced more easily to the recipient (without abusing notifications), as well as to find ways to strengthen and improve user education around the proper use of voting and comments.

Lastly, we would like to confirm here that the current iteration of the Thank you Reaction feature will be turned off at the conclusion of the current test (on July 17), while we analyze the data and consider the different feedback that has been given, to find the best way forward.


Update: As promised, the experiment has ended, and the Reactions feature has now been disabled on Stack Overflow.

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    But beyond that goal, this feature is also intended to provide an alternative way for users to express their appreciation for the efforts of other users --> but why?? do we really need an alternative to voting? ... using a paradigm that is familiar to them from other sites on the Internet. --> other sites are forums and social websites, SO is not one of them. Am I wrong? Jun 30, 2020 at 8:41
  • 76
    Why is there an attempt to make users feel like they are on a familiar forum, when the community goal is to make them understand that they are not? It seems that there a very conflicting interests here.
    – Scratte
    Jun 30, 2020 at 8:46
  • 39
    "Lastly, we would like to confirm here that the current iteration of the Thank you Reaction feature will be turned off " - thank you! +1
    – tripleee
    Jun 30, 2020 at 9:39
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    We don't need to show appreciation because this not a helpdesk. We don't value user effort or the time spent to write answer. We value the content of posts. If the content is good/useful/answer the question, you upvote it. If the content is bad/irrelevant/doesn't answer the question, you downvote it. If appreciation is needed, why we don't do it for questions? Asking question is the first step that allow people to provide good answers so we also need thanks to question, let's not forget a thanks to editors for their effort to make posts better, etc .. Jun 30, 2020 at 10:00
  • 6
    I think @tripleee inadvertently showed why such a feature could be useful, but also why this implementation doesn't work: Reacting to one specific part of the post instead of upvoting it as a whole.
    – Izkata
    Jul 7, 2020 at 16:52
  • 8
    @Izkata In fact it was very much on purpose, but thanks for spelling it out.
    – tripleee
    Jul 7, 2020 at 16:58
  • 2
    Can the "thanks" just trigger an automatic identified upvote, or convert someone's upvote into an identified one? A bare upvote without "thanks" would still be anonymous.
    – jxh
    Jul 8, 2020 at 23:57
  • 10
    Can we have a "face-palm" link for those questions where the OP really just hasn't bothered to engage their brain instead?
    – Liam
    Jul 9, 2020 at 14:25
  • 13
    How about just prepending the word "Thanks! " to the upvote tooltip? Jul 9, 2020 at 14:56
  • 11
    Looking forward to this being turned off - hope I'll never see it again Jul 15, 2020 at 20:03
  • 11
    Thanks for rolling back the Thanks reaction. Much appreciated - thanks again. Jul 19, 2020 at 10:11
  • 3
    @Scratte because I only noticed that after I turned it off yesterday, and the PR for fixing that still needs to be approved. Patience please. Jul 20, 2020 at 12:17
  • 2
    @YaakovEllis I understand. Thank you for telling us :)
    – Scratte
    Jul 20, 2020 at 12:23
  • 5
    Understandably, it will take some time to analyze the data and I don't think it is expected to share everything with us, but are you planning to share a summary of those analysis with the community?
    – M--
    Jul 20, 2020 at 20:54
  • 2
    @M--: According to this blog post about the Q3 2020 Roadmap: "This quarter, we will be reviewing the outcomes of this test, sharing results with the community, and deciding on next steps."
    – V2Blast
    Jul 28, 2020 at 7:52

37 Answers 37

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This won't make me stop posting "thank you" nor does it replace someone else posting it to me. Just stop minding such comments - simple.

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    Don't post thank you comments.
    – 10 Rep
    Jun 30, 2020 at 15:34
  • 36
    To be honest, when someone posts a "Thank you so much! This really helped me" it does make me smile. The "Thanks"-reaction doesn't, it just makes me wonder: Why?!?
    – Scratte
    Jun 30, 2020 at 15:40
  • 17
    Getting a thank-you-comments makes me feel much better than some impersonal rep icon popping up Jun 30, 2020 at 16:17
  • @Scratte I am frankly in the middle. I regret downvoting this answer. On one side, I feel heartwarmed when I recieve a thanks comment, but I get irritated when I can't tell thanks comments from feedback. If I had to live with thanks comments, I wouldn't really mind that much. Some people make too much of a deal of these comments.
    – 10 Rep
    Jun 30, 2020 at 17:55
  • 11
    @Scratte The reason the Thanks Reaction doesn't make you smile is because, like upvoting, it is a counter. It's a number. Numbers don't make you smile as much as someone personally saying "Thanks So much! You helped me out of a tight spot at work!".
    – 10 Rep
    Jun 30, 2020 at 17:57
  • 7
    @10Rep I think that's it, yes. Though I also smile when I get reputation gains, but it's a different kind of smile. It's like a "Ahh.. I'm closer to a helpful privileged now". But that's a focus on me, not on them.
    – Scratte
    Jun 30, 2020 at 18:09
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    @Scratte Ya, when I get reputation, I get a feeling of satisfaction, but when I get a thanks comment, I feel heartwarmed.
    – 10 Rep
    Jun 30, 2020 at 18:10
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    "Thank you" and other comments that go outside of the stated purpose of comments distract from the comments that provide additional information or raise points regarding the content itself. Such comments can be quite important to the poster and any future readers, and distracting from them undermines the very reason comments exist in the first place. So we should certainly not just "stop minding" that problem. That said, I do think this feature is a terrible way to try to address the problem (and addressing the problem doesn't necessarily involve trying to get rid of such comments altogether).
    – NotThatGuy
    Jul 1, 2020 at 20:54
  • 6
    @NotThatGuy Then let's also rid of profile pictures, as they have nothing to do with "content". And dark mode, since it's only cosmetic and adds nothing to raw information. And hot network questions, as they have literally nothing to do with the Q&A. And move profile icon next to question tags so it takes up less vertical space ... because who needs simple and minimal things that enrich site experience anyway, we're all just text-scraping bots here. Jul 1, 2020 at 21:27
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    @NotThatGuy These comments might be distracting from the original purpose of comments, but they help to keep users in a good mood, resulting in friendlier responses, more patience and especially on smaller sites or tags with a small number of users, they help to create a community. Jul 1, 2020 at 21:49
  • 2
    @OverLordGoldDragon Appealing to extremes is a logical fallacy. If you can't see the value of not hiding the comment you're looking for among 50 other comments that don't add anything to the post, then we have very different ideas of what the purpose of Stack Overflow is or what comments are for (or at least how they're used, because useful information from comments really should make their way into posts, but this doesn't happen all that often).
    – NotThatGuy
    Jul 1, 2020 at 21:49
  • 1
    @OverLordGoldDragon Also, I said this is a problem, I didn't say we should just get rid of these comments. In fact, I quite clearly said there may be ways to fix the problem without getting rid of such comments. So you seem to be putting words in my mouth and your reply doesn't seem to address anything I said in my comment (apart from just the fact that I disagreed with your answer).
    – NotThatGuy
    Jul 1, 2020 at 21:58
  • "This won't make me stop posting "thank you" [...] Just stop minding such comments - simple." Excuse me? I find that rude. Here we try to maintain the site; keep it clean and functional, and you happily make that harder? Fine; you wanna say thanks. Do you ever clean up after yourself? Do you delete your "thanks" only comments, after some time? If that is, then ok, I respect your need, and I won't mind it. I don't flag "thanks" comments that are only a day old, from the question asker to an answerer, but if they've been left there for a long time, then yes, I do my part of clearing them out. Jul 4, 2020 at 2:21
  • 1
    @Andreas "Thank you" comments don't suddenly make a site dysfunctional - several of the network sites don't share this aversion and work fine. On the other hand a lack of engaged users that will invest their spare time in reviews and other moderation tasks, can ruin a site. Jul 4, 2020 at 14:44
  • I'd love to point to the stark contrast between reactions to essentially the same post between this and here. Just confirms my idea on audience variance and Meta being out of touch with the rest of users. Jul 12, 2020 at 12:51
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Ideas related to experimenting with the placement of the button or prompting users to give an upvote if they give a reaction without voting are great. Please keep them coming!

OK, I have an idea I'd like to share. (I apologize in advance if it has already been proposed by another answer in this or the previous thread. I tried to at least skim over all of them, but due to the sheer number, I might have missed one.)

I am a high-rep user on SO, but I also read some other SE sites where I don't even have an account. I like the idea that even users who do not have upvoting rights can give feedback on a post.

Since this feature is highly disliked by high-reputation users (according to the feedback here), why not do the following:

  • Show the thank-you button to anonymous and low-reputation users (who cannot vote yet). Either hide the up-/downvote buttons or use some clever UI trickery to make it obvious to the users that they can't be used.

  • Once a user has reached the voting threshold, the situation is reversed: The thank-you button is not available, but the up-/downvote buttons are. A helpful tooltip could explain to the user why this is the case. ("You have voting rights now. Please use the upvote button to say thanks.")

Thus, "thank-you"s would become some kind of "upvote from anonymous and low-rep users without affecting reputation". Yes, allowing anonymous users to give thanks would allow "thank-you fraud", but since "thank-you"s don't affect reputation, there would be no incentive to do that (and even if people did, there's little harm done).

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    The reason why I created my account was to become able to leave feedback by upvoting answers. I wouldn't have felt such a need to do it if there had been some alternative way to thank the authors of good posts. Jul 2, 2020 at 17:01
  • Confusing low-rep users is a significant part of the reason why the users here on MSO have opposed this feature.
    – einpoklum
    Jul 27, 2020 at 9:13
1

"Thank you for your failure!"

Correct me if I am wrong, but logically isn't this the only case when a "Thank you" would differ from an upvote? Certainly fits the spirit of the times. But on a technical forum? It would certainly slide for discussion of CSS, but what if it is like software controlling voltage or pressure tanks? Just wondering...

-2

How about the training wheels approach where we gradually introduce new users to the idea that on StackOverflow / StackExchange sites upvote == thumbs up == thanks?

At the start, new users will see a "thumbs up" button right next to the regular upvote button, but when they aim for it, a larger uniting button is revealed, and a hover tooltip explains that they are one and the same.

After the user has clicked that big button a few times, make it smaller, but still show the "thumbs up" for a few more times. After we're pretty sure the user now knows where to click for "thanks", make the upvote button look like it normally does, and remove the "thanks" part from the upvote button hover message for them.

enter image description here

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    That's ... problematic - while this is on the "useful" side of things (especially compared to the thanks button), it is worrying that users will be trained that upvote means "thanks" and not "this answer is useful" or "has a long-term value", etc. And then - what would downvote mean in this paradigm, "no, thanks"? That said, the idea behind gently nudging new users towards voting is certainly promising Jul 2, 2020 at 13:25
  • 9
    Personally I would remove the thanks button altogether, like it was before, and add an orange warning when typing "thanks" in comments that explains you shouldn't just use comments for thanks, and how thanking and upvotes are not the same thing. But since I'm not the captain of this ship, I'm only pitching what I think the captain might like, and what would do less harm than the current proposal. Jul 2, 2020 at 15:13
  • 1
    Well, I even prototyped what you said in the previous answer :) It took about 20 mins to build even given the fact that I am not very experienced in React - a dedicated team could do wonders with the feature if given time... Actually, pretty much anything would be potentially less harmful than reactions (I am unsure, though, if solving a problem was the main driving force behind it - the original blog and other platforms having the feature seem to indicate that the thought process was: "we need a feature, let's think of a problem it solves", hence the mess we are in) Jul 2, 2020 at 15:25
  • 1
    I've probably seen regexes for detecting "thanks" in comments proposed about 10 years ago, so it's definitely not a new idea. Reactions are a whole other topic though. I think there is merit in being able to "react" or "rate/tag" a post as "useful" but at the same time "low quality" or "citation needed" or "bad code formatting", which currently are conflicting ideas and would result in a muddy feeling when clicking upvote or downvote, because it's not always black and white. But if we're having such a hard time explaining what the upvote button is, maybe SO userbase is not ready for reactions Jul 2, 2020 at 15:38
  • I sincerely understand that is is difficult to explain how a complex platform for gathering curated, high quality, low noise, high effort information to an average internet user, and that it's resulting in a large "bounce %" of incoming potential users. But since StackOverflow has decided that this is what they want to do - let them. I want to do something else, on another platform, and that is what I intend to do at some point. Jul 2, 2020 at 15:41
  • 1
    Re:regexes - yes, not to mention the extended discussion, comment removal crusades, patterns and userscripts. I agree (and I suspect everyone - or at least a significant part - does) that we need better explaining, tagging, search, review queues, one could go on for a long time. And yet here we are... Jul 2, 2020 at 23:09
-3

Why don't we just ask users to up vote answers rather than saying thanks?:

  • Some users can't up vote yet. The current implementation fixes this. You could do the same thing by just displaying some indication of "uncounted up-votes" for all the votes that were cast by users who don't have enough reputation yet to vote.
  • You can't tell who up-voted an answer. Slack is a good place to see why that is important. By reacting to something I show that I have read and dealt with it. More than expressing thanks, it lets me say "I'm done with this thread of the conversation". Also, as an answerer it makes me feel better when I know that I have helped the person I am "talking" to rather than some random person on the internet.
    • But mark as solved should be how we close the conversation: Yes, but there are restrictions around that (only 1 answer, only after 15 minutes). If you want to get rid of "thanks" comments I need to be able to indicate my thanks in a way that is no more restrictive than the comment system.
    • But stack overflow isn't conversational. That is what chat is for: You're trying to deal with new people. People are used to communicating in conversations. The whole point of this thanks button is to placate new users until they come to terms with the fact that they are not in a conversation.
  • Reaction emojis are good for bad answers. This is a bad answer, but it's funny, so it's the most up-voted answer by a lot. Reactions give users an outlet for the irresistible urge to reward something that they like or that they think someone worked hard for, even when it's a bad answer.
-7

Edit after update and 'feature' turned off:


I hope that the number one bit of feedback they take from this experiment is that they could try running some of this by us before making a site-altering change. The conglomerate of users here have loads of experience with these kinds of features. We can offer guidance before taking actions that yet again threatens to alienate the community from itself and from the company.


Original Post:

The only way this 'feature' is of any use is if it's restricted to unregistered users. Otherwise we already have a voting system. You can always fiddle around with that if you really feel the need. If you had bothered to atleast try and run this idea by us before implementing it, an idea that can change the nature of how this site works, we probably could have warned you of the consequences, including how well it would be received.

Counter proposal

Instead, allow anybody to vote up, registred or unregistered. BUT if they are unregistered or have reputation lower than 15, their 'vote' goes towards this little 'Thanks' counter. If they vote down, they get an annoying popup saying that they have to register to vote down (if they register, then they get the extant feedback regarding reputation), but you guys keep track of it either way. Any up vote by a registered user with high enough reputation automatically likewise adds to the 'Thanks' counter.

This way you get real data of the voting patterns of all users of this site, registered and unregistered. You are still prompting people to register as is clearly in the interests of the company (you'd be surprised how many people will register just to get their downvote in). And the identity and nature of the site as a Q&A remains relatively unscathed.

--

Maybe that's a brilliant idea. Maybe that's a terrible idea. Maybe it's somewhere in-between and workable with some tweaks. But without two-way feedback from the people who use this site the most, you're just throwing mud out onto the wall and trying to see if anything sticks.

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    "if they are unregistered [...], their 'vote' goes towards this little 'Thanks' counter". Highly spammable. "If they vote down, they get an annoying popup saying that they have to register to vote down". Considering that (I guess) most users first use the site as unregistered users, and then register, I'm afraid this would implicitly make downvoting discouraged. "Any up vote by a registered user with high enough reputation automatically likewise adds to the 'Thanks' counter." Then I don't see the point in that counter. Jul 4, 2020 at 2:12
  • @Andreas, That's useful feedback. I could use that kind of criticism to modify my ideas to either try something better, more in spirit with this site, or maybe even just scrap the idea altogether. Now just imagine if StackExchange proposed their idea to the users here before just implementing it blindly. Especially an idea like this which can radically change the nature of this site. I know this post is getting a lot of downvotes. But I truly believe that StackExchange ought to run this kind of stuff by the users of this site first, and I'm not ever going to back down from that stance.
    – ouflak
    Jul 4, 2020 at 9:05
  • 2
    Yeah, of course, that’s what I’ve been saying all along too; they should’ve proposed it to us first. I’m pretty sure almost nobody disagrees with your first paragraph. Jul 4, 2020 at 12:49
  • @Andreas, "I’m pretty sure almost nobody disagrees with your first paragraph." -9 downvotes, +2 upvotes so far. It's not the first time that I've said something that not everybody, including StackExchange, agrees with. Probably won't be the last....
    – ouflak
    Jul 4, 2020 at 13:04
  • People voted based on your counter proposal. ;) Jul 4, 2020 at 13:05
-11

NOTE: This would be a comment if they were not locked with a message stating to post as answer instead:

This is only tangentially related, but I thought that an upvote was intended to indicate a high quality post, not for appreciation or "thanks".

I have had several times when I can tell someone put a lot of time and effort into an answer for me. But it did not work. It was incorrect for some reason or another.

But maybe the post helped me thing about the issue in a different way (though it is still not right), or I am just grateful for the amount of work they put in. A "Thanks" feed back option may fit there.

I am not really sure one way or the other on the "thanks" feedback.

This comment/answer is intended to see if there really is a distinction between upvotes for "thanks" and upvotes for a "high quality answer" (and if an upvote should be used for one, or the other, or both).

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    But it did not work. It was incorrect for some reason or another. --> how a thanks is suitable here? how this will send a message to the user that his answer is not correct even if it's elaborated. In this case a comment is more suitable to tell him this is not working for me because of ... but It gives me few ideas to tackle the problem differently by doing ... Now, the author will know that he's doing wrong and will also know the new direction you will be taking and this is a good message to him so he can either update his answer or delete it or add comment to clarify things. Jun 30, 2020 at 19:58
  • 13
    actually your answer shows how thanks can be frustrating to the author because he will not understand why you gave thanks wihout upvoting or accepting the answer. He will never be able to understand what you had in mind and that his answer is not good for you. Jun 30, 2020 at 20:00
  • 4
    When I see comments like that, they're usually in the form of "Thanks, but <reason why the answer doesn't work>." Those comments often contain useful information, so depending on whether they still comment a thank react is either redundant or actively harmful in that situation. Jun 30, 2020 at 22:31
  • 2
    So, from what I am reading here, an up vote is NOT for saying thanks. It is only for high quality posts. If you have a non-high quality post, that you want to say thank you for (i.e. for the effort put in by the answerer), you should post a comment with the thank you and why it does not work for you. I was getting confused because many posts here say that the way to say thank you is to upvote. But from the comments here, it seems that only applies if the answer is correct. (Which is what I do now. I use upvotes for high quality answers (which assumes they are correct).)
    – Vaccano
    Jun 30, 2020 at 22:42
  • 11
    If the answer is good, you should upvote it. If it isn't good, you should explain why it isn't good (even if it's just "I couldn't get this to work"). A "thanks" without any positive or negative feedback is just noise. Jun 30, 2020 at 23:05
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