Based on the support for @HolyBlackCat's preferred rule modification to my previous meta question, I'd like to crystalize the level of community support for my feature request in the name of progress. I'm going to term this feature "Fresh Question Shielding" (FQS).
I am proposing that a feature be built into Stack Overflow which prevents users from answering fresh questions if they have a recent history of answering questions that should not have been answered -- evidenced by the fact that the community later closed the page.
Effectively, this should alter the perception of "Low Hanging Fruit Questions" to be "Forbidden Fruit Questions" which will make curation easier and reduce review queues.
You can visit my previous meta question to see the algorithmic rules for this feature, the benefits of its rollout, and commentary with the community.
Here is what has changed in my proposal:
- Users with less than 5 answers will not be affected by FQS.
- Users will always be allowed to self-answer -- even if affected by FQS.
- Users will not be able to circumvent the FQS rules by marking one of their answers as community wiki. This is because a wiki-answered page will still prevent the Roomba from doing its excellent job.
For anyone who hasn't seen my previous proposal or doesn't feel like link-chasing, the crux of it is that any users (regardless of rep) who have >= 60% of their most recent answers on closed questions will be prevented from answering questions that are less than 4 hours old. They can still flag, edit, vote, and comment on fresh questions. They can even begin crafting answers to these fresh questions -- they just can't post them until the community has had sufficient time to vet the page. To remove the FQS, users can either delete their answers on closed pages or answer non-fresh questions until their percentage drops below 60%.
This feature would go nicely with any combination of improvements to help pages, tiny rep gains for closing well, and/or any other community initiative to improve content curation.