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Broken windows and the good old days

The broken window theory suggests that, by fixing decay or destruction promptly, we can prevent it from being seen as normal and then spreading...

We've put a lot of work into closing questions in order to discourage folks from asking questions on certain topics: polls and GTKY questions were frequently justified by pointing to past examples that had been allowed or overlooked, and getting rid of them did ease that pain a bit.

But poorly-asked questions are another matter. To apply the broken window solution here, you'd have to first believe that these questions are being written by folks setting out to write badly, to follow the examples set by the other questions they're reading. We'd also need to get rid of all of them - not just close them, but delete them. And we'd have to have started doing this years ago...

Every community - online or otherwise - reaches a point where nostalgia kicks in with a vengeance. Remember back when these United States of America was a God-fearing nation of law-abiding citizens who respected their elders and taught their children the value of hard work and honesty? Yeah, me neither - and I sure as hell don't remember a time when I could open up Stack Overflow and not see crap floating on top.

Flapping herrings

I have a lot of respect for Jon and Hans, but reading their answers here I can't help but think they're... Well, standing in front of a hurricane looking for butterflies.

The big problem with measuring question quality over time based on which questions get closed is that it relies on something that has always been applied inconsistently. Even blatantly off-topic questions can persist for years without a single close vote purely due to their obscurity, and changing standards over time have muddied the waters further by making broad swaths of once-acceptable questions less acceptable. If nothing else, close voting requires at least 5 trusted users to care strongly about a given question, and that's a lot to ask for mediocre questions that few want to even visit much less read.

Just about everyone who has tried it realizes that even trying to gauge question quality based on score is dodgy due to a lack of signal... And there are many more active voters than there are closers.

Summer of review

Back in 2012, while the blog was all a-flutter with the talky sort of love, Geoff Dalgas & crew were hard at work on their own labor of love: a bigger, badder review system, one designed from the ground up to mobilize the community and get them involved in day-to-day moderation. By October, we had some stinkin' badges and for the first time in a very long time were actually making a small dent in the backlog of questions with pending close votes.

You might not know it from the sorts of discussions that tend to crop up on meta, but the revamped review system had a rather large impact on how Stack Overflow was moderated, on how new questions (and answers) were received, and especially on how quickly questions were closed - something that had been a pain point in the closing systema pain point in the closing system for years. Coupled with more aggressive automatic deletion, and we're doing a better job now of getting rid of broken windows than ever before...

So, tl;dr: no, the theory does not apply to low quality questions and closing.

Broken windows and the good old days

The broken window theory suggests that, by fixing decay or destruction promptly, we can prevent it from being seen as normal and then spreading...

We've put a lot of work into closing questions in order to discourage folks from asking questions on certain topics: polls and GTKY questions were frequently justified by pointing to past examples that had been allowed or overlooked, and getting rid of them did ease that pain a bit.

But poorly-asked questions are another matter. To apply the broken window solution here, you'd have to first believe that these questions are being written by folks setting out to write badly, to follow the examples set by the other questions they're reading. We'd also need to get rid of all of them - not just close them, but delete them. And we'd have to have started doing this years ago...

Every community - online or otherwise - reaches a point where nostalgia kicks in with a vengeance. Remember back when these United States of America was a God-fearing nation of law-abiding citizens who respected their elders and taught their children the value of hard work and honesty? Yeah, me neither - and I sure as hell don't remember a time when I could open up Stack Overflow and not see crap floating on top.

Flapping herrings

I have a lot of respect for Jon and Hans, but reading their answers here I can't help but think they're... Well, standing in front of a hurricane looking for butterflies.

The big problem with measuring question quality over time based on which questions get closed is that it relies on something that has always been applied inconsistently. Even blatantly off-topic questions can persist for years without a single close vote purely due to their obscurity, and changing standards over time have muddied the waters further by making broad swaths of once-acceptable questions less acceptable. If nothing else, close voting requires at least 5 trusted users to care strongly about a given question, and that's a lot to ask for mediocre questions that few want to even visit much less read.

Just about everyone who has tried it realizes that even trying to gauge question quality based on score is dodgy due to a lack of signal... And there are many more active voters than there are closers.

Summer of review

Back in 2012, while the blog was all a-flutter with the talky sort of love, Geoff Dalgas & crew were hard at work on their own labor of love: a bigger, badder review system, one designed from the ground up to mobilize the community and get them involved in day-to-day moderation. By October, we had some stinkin' badges and for the first time in a very long time were actually making a small dent in the backlog of questions with pending close votes.

You might not know it from the sorts of discussions that tend to crop up on meta, but the revamped review system had a rather large impact on how Stack Overflow was moderated, on how new questions (and answers) were received, and especially on how quickly questions were closed - something that had been a pain point in the closing system for years. Coupled with more aggressive automatic deletion, and we're doing a better job now of getting rid of broken windows than ever before...

So, tl;dr: no, the theory does not apply to low quality questions and closing.

Broken windows and the good old days

The broken window theory suggests that, by fixing decay or destruction promptly, we can prevent it from being seen as normal and then spreading...

We've put a lot of work into closing questions in order to discourage folks from asking questions on certain topics: polls and GTKY questions were frequently justified by pointing to past examples that had been allowed or overlooked, and getting rid of them did ease that pain a bit.

But poorly-asked questions are another matter. To apply the broken window solution here, you'd have to first believe that these questions are being written by folks setting out to write badly, to follow the examples set by the other questions they're reading. We'd also need to get rid of all of them - not just close them, but delete them. And we'd have to have started doing this years ago...

Every community - online or otherwise - reaches a point where nostalgia kicks in with a vengeance. Remember back when these United States of America was a God-fearing nation of law-abiding citizens who respected their elders and taught their children the value of hard work and honesty? Yeah, me neither - and I sure as hell don't remember a time when I could open up Stack Overflow and not see crap floating on top.

Flapping herrings

I have a lot of respect for Jon and Hans, but reading their answers here I can't help but think they're... Well, standing in front of a hurricane looking for butterflies.

The big problem with measuring question quality over time based on which questions get closed is that it relies on something that has always been applied inconsistently. Even blatantly off-topic questions can persist for years without a single close vote purely due to their obscurity, and changing standards over time have muddied the waters further by making broad swaths of once-acceptable questions less acceptable. If nothing else, close voting requires at least 5 trusted users to care strongly about a given question, and that's a lot to ask for mediocre questions that few want to even visit much less read.

Just about everyone who has tried it realizes that even trying to gauge question quality based on score is dodgy due to a lack of signal... And there are many more active voters than there are closers.

Summer of review

Back in 2012, while the blog was all a-flutter with the talky sort of love, Geoff Dalgas & crew were hard at work on their own labor of love: a bigger, badder review system, one designed from the ground up to mobilize the community and get them involved in day-to-day moderation. By October, we had some stinkin' badges and for the first time in a very long time were actually making a small dent in the backlog of questions with pending close votes.

You might not know it from the sorts of discussions that tend to crop up on meta, but the revamped review system had a rather large impact on how Stack Overflow was moderated, on how new questions (and answers) were received, and especially on how quickly questions were closed - something that had been a pain point in the closing system for years. Coupled with more aggressive automatic deletion, and we're doing a better job now of getting rid of broken windows than ever before...

So, tl;dr: no, the theory does not apply to low quality questions and closing.

Commonmark migration
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##Broken windows and the good old days

Broken windows and the good old days

The broken window theory suggests that, by fixing decay or destruction promptly, we can prevent it from being seen as normal and then spreading...

We've put a lot of work into closing questions in order to discourage folks from asking questions on certain topics: polls and GTKY questions were frequently justified by pointing to past examples that had been allowed or overlooked, and getting rid of them did ease that pain a bit.

But poorly-asked questions are another matter. To apply the broken window solution here, you'd have to first believe that these questions are being written by folks setting out to write badly, to follow the examples set by the other questions they're reading. We'd also need to get rid of all of them - not just close them, but delete them. And we'd have to have started doing this years ago...

Every community - online or otherwise - reaches a point where nostalgia kicks in with a vengeance. Remember back when these United States of America was a God-fearing nation of law-abiding citizens who respected their elders and taught their children the value of hard work and honesty? Yeah, me neither - and I sure as hell don't remember a time when I could open up Stack Overflow and not see crap floating on top.

##Flapping herrings

Flapping herrings

I have a lot of respect for Jon and Hans, but reading their answers here I can't help but think they're... Well, standing in front of a hurricane looking for butterflies.

The big problem with measuring question quality over time based on which questions get closed is that it relies on something that has always been applied inconsistently. Even blatantly off-topic questions can persist for years without a single close vote purely due to their obscurity, and changing standards over time have muddied the waters further by making broad swaths of once-acceptable questions less acceptable. If nothing else, close voting requires at least 5 trusted users to care strongly about a given question, and that's a lot to ask for mediocre questions that few want to even visit much less read.

Just about everyone who has tried it realizes that even trying to gauge question quality based on score is dodgy due to a lack of signal... And there are many more active voters than there are closers.

##Summer of review

Summer of review

Back in 2012, while the blog was all a-flutter with the talky sort of love, Geoff Dalgas & crew were hard at work on their own labor of love: a bigger, badder review system, one designed from the ground up to mobilize the community and get them involved in day-to-day moderation. By October, we had some stinkin' badges and for the first time in a very long time were actually making a small dent in the backlog of questions with pending close votes.

You might not know it from the sorts of discussions that tend to crop up on meta, but the revamped review system had a rather large impact on how Stack Overflow was moderated, on how new questions (and answers) were received, and especially on how quickly questions were closed - something that had been a pain point in the closing system for years. Coupled with more aggressive automatic deletion, and we're doing a better job now of getting rid of broken windows than ever before...

So, tl;dr: no, the theory does not apply to low quality questions and closing.

##Broken windows and the good old days

The broken window theory suggests that, by fixing decay or destruction promptly, we can prevent it from being seen as normal and then spreading...

We've put a lot of work into closing questions in order to discourage folks from asking questions on certain topics: polls and GTKY questions were frequently justified by pointing to past examples that had been allowed or overlooked, and getting rid of them did ease that pain a bit.

But poorly-asked questions are another matter. To apply the broken window solution here, you'd have to first believe that these questions are being written by folks setting out to write badly, to follow the examples set by the other questions they're reading. We'd also need to get rid of all of them - not just close them, but delete them. And we'd have to have started doing this years ago...

Every community - online or otherwise - reaches a point where nostalgia kicks in with a vengeance. Remember back when these United States of America was a God-fearing nation of law-abiding citizens who respected their elders and taught their children the value of hard work and honesty? Yeah, me neither - and I sure as hell don't remember a time when I could open up Stack Overflow and not see crap floating on top.

##Flapping herrings

I have a lot of respect for Jon and Hans, but reading their answers here I can't help but think they're... Well, standing in front of a hurricane looking for butterflies.

The big problem with measuring question quality over time based on which questions get closed is that it relies on something that has always been applied inconsistently. Even blatantly off-topic questions can persist for years without a single close vote purely due to their obscurity, and changing standards over time have muddied the waters further by making broad swaths of once-acceptable questions less acceptable. If nothing else, close voting requires at least 5 trusted users to care strongly about a given question, and that's a lot to ask for mediocre questions that few want to even visit much less read.

Just about everyone who has tried it realizes that even trying to gauge question quality based on score is dodgy due to a lack of signal... And there are many more active voters than there are closers.

##Summer of review

Back in 2012, while the blog was all a-flutter with the talky sort of love, Geoff Dalgas & crew were hard at work on their own labor of love: a bigger, badder review system, one designed from the ground up to mobilize the community and get them involved in day-to-day moderation. By October, we had some stinkin' badges and for the first time in a very long time were actually making a small dent in the backlog of questions with pending close votes.

You might not know it from the sorts of discussions that tend to crop up on meta, but the revamped review system had a rather large impact on how Stack Overflow was moderated, on how new questions (and answers) were received, and especially on how quickly questions were closed - something that had been a pain point in the closing system for years. Coupled with more aggressive automatic deletion, and we're doing a better job now of getting rid of broken windows than ever before...

So, tl;dr: no, the theory does not apply to low quality questions and closing.

Broken windows and the good old days

The broken window theory suggests that, by fixing decay or destruction promptly, we can prevent it from being seen as normal and then spreading...

We've put a lot of work into closing questions in order to discourage folks from asking questions on certain topics: polls and GTKY questions were frequently justified by pointing to past examples that had been allowed or overlooked, and getting rid of them did ease that pain a bit.

But poorly-asked questions are another matter. To apply the broken window solution here, you'd have to first believe that these questions are being written by folks setting out to write badly, to follow the examples set by the other questions they're reading. We'd also need to get rid of all of them - not just close them, but delete them. And we'd have to have started doing this years ago...

Every community - online or otherwise - reaches a point where nostalgia kicks in with a vengeance. Remember back when these United States of America was a God-fearing nation of law-abiding citizens who respected their elders and taught their children the value of hard work and honesty? Yeah, me neither - and I sure as hell don't remember a time when I could open up Stack Overflow and not see crap floating on top.

Flapping herrings

I have a lot of respect for Jon and Hans, but reading their answers here I can't help but think they're... Well, standing in front of a hurricane looking for butterflies.

The big problem with measuring question quality over time based on which questions get closed is that it relies on something that has always been applied inconsistently. Even blatantly off-topic questions can persist for years without a single close vote purely due to their obscurity, and changing standards over time have muddied the waters further by making broad swaths of once-acceptable questions less acceptable. If nothing else, close voting requires at least 5 trusted users to care strongly about a given question, and that's a lot to ask for mediocre questions that few want to even visit much less read.

Just about everyone who has tried it realizes that even trying to gauge question quality based on score is dodgy due to a lack of signal... And there are many more active voters than there are closers.

Summer of review

Back in 2012, while the blog was all a-flutter with the talky sort of love, Geoff Dalgas & crew were hard at work on their own labor of love: a bigger, badder review system, one designed from the ground up to mobilize the community and get them involved in day-to-day moderation. By October, we had some stinkin' badges and for the first time in a very long time were actually making a small dent in the backlog of questions with pending close votes.

You might not know it from the sorts of discussions that tend to crop up on meta, but the revamped review system had a rather large impact on how Stack Overflow was moderated, on how new questions (and answers) were received, and especially on how quickly questions were closed - something that had been a pain point in the closing system for years. Coupled with more aggressive automatic deletion, and we're doing a better job now of getting rid of broken windows than ever before...

So, tl;dr: no, the theory does not apply to low quality questions and closing.

replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

##Broken windows and the good old days

The broken window theory suggests that, by fixing decay or destruction promptly, we can prevent it from being seen as normal and then spreading...

We've put a lot of work into closing questions in order to discourage folks from asking questions on certain topics: polls and GTKY questions were frequently justified by pointing to past examples that had been allowed or overlooked, and getting rid of them did ease that pain a bit.

But poorly-asked questions are another matter. To apply the broken window solution here, you'd have to first believe that these questions are being written by folks setting out to write badly, to follow the examples set by the other questions they're reading. We'd also need to get rid of all of them - not just close them, but delete them. And we'd have to have started doing this years ago...

Every community - online or otherwise - reaches a point where nostalgia kicks in with a vengeance. Remember back when these United States of America was a God-fearing nation of law-abiding citizens who respected their elders and taught their children the value of hard work and honesty? Yeah, me neither - and I sure as hell don't remember a time when I could open up Stack Overflow and not see crap floating on top.

##Flapping herrings

I have a lot of respect for Jon and Hans, but reading their answers here I can't help but think they're... Well, standing in front of a hurricane looking for butterflies.

The big problem with measuring question quality over time based on which questions get closed is that it relies on something that has always been applied inconsistently. Even blatantly off-topic questions can persist for years without a single close vote purely due to their obscurity, and changing standards over time have muddied the waters further by making broad swaths of once-acceptable questions less acceptable. If nothing else, close voting requires at least 5 trusted users to care strongly about a given question, and that's a lot to ask for mediocre questions that few want to even visit much less read.

Just about everyone who has tried it realizes that even trying to gauge question quality based on score is dodgy due to a lack of signal... And there are many more active voters than there are closers.

##Summer of review

Back in 2012, while the blog was all a-flutter with the talky sort of love, Geoff Dalgas & crew were hard at work on their own labor of love: a bigger, badder review systema bigger, badder review system, one designed from the ground up to mobilize the community and get them involved in day-to-day moderation. By October, we had some stinkin' badgeswe had some stinkin' badges and for the first time in a very long time were actually making a small dent in the backlog of questions with pending close votes.

You might not know it from the sorts of discussions that tend to crop up on meta, but the revamped review system had a rather large impact on how Stack Overflow was moderated, on how new questions (and answers) were received, and especially on how quickly questions were closed - something that had been a pain point in the closing system for years. Coupled with more aggressive automatic deletionmore aggressive automatic deletion, and we're doing a better job now of getting rid of broken windows than ever before...

So, tl;dr: no, the theory does not apply to low quality questions and closing.

##Broken windows and the good old days

The broken window theory suggests that, by fixing decay or destruction promptly, we can prevent it from being seen as normal and then spreading...

We've put a lot of work into closing questions in order to discourage folks from asking questions on certain topics: polls and GTKY questions were frequently justified by pointing to past examples that had been allowed or overlooked, and getting rid of them did ease that pain a bit.

But poorly-asked questions are another matter. To apply the broken window solution here, you'd have to first believe that these questions are being written by folks setting out to write badly, to follow the examples set by the other questions they're reading. We'd also need to get rid of all of them - not just close them, but delete them. And we'd have to have started doing this years ago...

Every community - online or otherwise - reaches a point where nostalgia kicks in with a vengeance. Remember back when these United States of America was a God-fearing nation of law-abiding citizens who respected their elders and taught their children the value of hard work and honesty? Yeah, me neither - and I sure as hell don't remember a time when I could open up Stack Overflow and not see crap floating on top.

##Flapping herrings

I have a lot of respect for Jon and Hans, but reading their answers here I can't help but think they're... Well, standing in front of a hurricane looking for butterflies.

The big problem with measuring question quality over time based on which questions get closed is that it relies on something that has always been applied inconsistently. Even blatantly off-topic questions can persist for years without a single close vote purely due to their obscurity, and changing standards over time have muddied the waters further by making broad swaths of once-acceptable questions less acceptable. If nothing else, close voting requires at least 5 trusted users to care strongly about a given question, and that's a lot to ask for mediocre questions that few want to even visit much less read.

Just about everyone who has tried it realizes that even trying to gauge question quality based on score is dodgy due to a lack of signal... And there are many more active voters than there are closers.

##Summer of review

Back in 2012, while the blog was all a-flutter with the talky sort of love, Geoff Dalgas & crew were hard at work on their own labor of love: a bigger, badder review system, one designed from the ground up to mobilize the community and get them involved in day-to-day moderation. By October, we had some stinkin' badges and for the first time in a very long time were actually making a small dent in the backlog of questions with pending close votes.

You might not know it from the sorts of discussions that tend to crop up on meta, but the revamped review system had a rather large impact on how Stack Overflow was moderated, on how new questions (and answers) were received, and especially on how quickly questions were closed - something that had been a pain point in the closing system for years. Coupled with more aggressive automatic deletion, and we're doing a better job now of getting rid of broken windows than ever before...

So, tl;dr: no, the theory does not apply to low quality questions and closing.

##Broken windows and the good old days

The broken window theory suggests that, by fixing decay or destruction promptly, we can prevent it from being seen as normal and then spreading...

We've put a lot of work into closing questions in order to discourage folks from asking questions on certain topics: polls and GTKY questions were frequently justified by pointing to past examples that had been allowed or overlooked, and getting rid of them did ease that pain a bit.

But poorly-asked questions are another matter. To apply the broken window solution here, you'd have to first believe that these questions are being written by folks setting out to write badly, to follow the examples set by the other questions they're reading. We'd also need to get rid of all of them - not just close them, but delete them. And we'd have to have started doing this years ago...

Every community - online or otherwise - reaches a point where nostalgia kicks in with a vengeance. Remember back when these United States of America was a God-fearing nation of law-abiding citizens who respected their elders and taught their children the value of hard work and honesty? Yeah, me neither - and I sure as hell don't remember a time when I could open up Stack Overflow and not see crap floating on top.

##Flapping herrings

I have a lot of respect for Jon and Hans, but reading their answers here I can't help but think they're... Well, standing in front of a hurricane looking for butterflies.

The big problem with measuring question quality over time based on which questions get closed is that it relies on something that has always been applied inconsistently. Even blatantly off-topic questions can persist for years without a single close vote purely due to their obscurity, and changing standards over time have muddied the waters further by making broad swaths of once-acceptable questions less acceptable. If nothing else, close voting requires at least 5 trusted users to care strongly about a given question, and that's a lot to ask for mediocre questions that few want to even visit much less read.

Just about everyone who has tried it realizes that even trying to gauge question quality based on score is dodgy due to a lack of signal... And there are many more active voters than there are closers.

##Summer of review

Back in 2012, while the blog was all a-flutter with the talky sort of love, Geoff Dalgas & crew were hard at work on their own labor of love: a bigger, badder review system, one designed from the ground up to mobilize the community and get them involved in day-to-day moderation. By October, we had some stinkin' badges and for the first time in a very long time were actually making a small dent in the backlog of questions with pending close votes.

You might not know it from the sorts of discussions that tend to crop up on meta, but the revamped review system had a rather large impact on how Stack Overflow was moderated, on how new questions (and answers) were received, and especially on how quickly questions were closed - something that had been a pain point in the closing system for years. Coupled with more aggressive automatic deletion, and we're doing a better job now of getting rid of broken windows than ever before...

So, tl;dr: no, the theory does not apply to low quality questions and closing.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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