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Your question raised too many low qualify flags. Left as is, it will not even be reviewed for consideration.

 

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Your question raised too many low qualify flags. Left as is, it will not even be reviewed for consideration.

 

Please take some time to review our guides on writing a good question if you haven't done so already, and amend your question accordingly.

Your question raised several of our low quality flags. If you leave things as is and re-submit this form, the question will be pushed to a triage queue.

 

The triage queue is where reviewers will decide whether you question fits our quality standards or not. When not, they may prompt you to improve your question or delete it outright, before it even appears on the site.

 

Before re-submitting this form, please take some time to review our guides on writing a good question if you haven't done so already, and amend your question if you feel it is necessary.

Your question raised too many low qualify flags. Left as is, it will not even be reviewed for consideration.

Please take some time to review our guides on writing a good question if you haven't done so already, and amend your question accordingly.

Your question raised several of our low quality flags. If you leave things as is and re-submit this form, the question will be pushed to a triage queue.

The triage queue is where reviewers will decide whether you question fits our quality standards or not. When not, they may prompt you to improve your question or delete it outright, before it even appears on the site.

Before re-submitting this form, please take some time to review our guides on writing a good question if you haven't done so already, and amend your question if you feel it is necessary.

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Denis de Bernardy
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As things stand, I'd be willing to wager that this experiment will fail miserably. Primarily for threefour reasons.

Thirdly, and least importantly, it's evident in the queue's history that quality standards are very different from one reviewer to the next. Some questions, which I'd rate as objectively "Get out of my face" unsalvageable, apparently look OK for other reviewers.

Lastly, and in stark contrast with the low quality post queue where mindlessly closing typically is the obviously correct answer (even when you know next to nothing of what's being asked), these questions often need to be read, and sometimes even understood, in order to make an educated assessment of how bad they are.

Only show what the reviewer is comfortable evaluating

This last reason is easy enough to fix: only show posts tagged with either of one of the reviewer's favorite tags or one of the tags in which the reviewer has a bronze badge.

Give more incentive to weed through the trash

With respect to the last twosecond and third reasons, I'd like to suggest that any "Unsalvageable" or "Needs improvement" vote cast on a question that ultimately gets published as "Looks OK" without modifications should automatically count as a down-vote.

As things stand, I'd be willing to wager that this experiment will fail miserably. Primarily for three reasons.

Thirdly, and least importantly, it's evident in the queue's history that quality standards are very different from one reviewer to the next. Some questions, which I'd rate as objectively "Get out of my face" unsalvageable, apparently look OK for other reviewers.

Give more incentive to weed through the trash

With respect to the last two reasons, I'd like to suggest that any "Unsalvageable" or "Needs improvement" vote cast on a question that ultimately gets published as "Looks OK" without modifications should automatically count as a down-vote.

As things stand, I'd be willing to wager that this experiment will fail miserably. Primarily for four reasons.

Thirdly, it's evident in the queue's history that quality standards are very different from one reviewer to the next. Some questions, which I'd rate as objectively "Get out of my face" unsalvageable, apparently look OK for other reviewers.

Lastly, and in stark contrast with the low quality post queue where mindlessly closing typically is the obviously correct answer (even when you know next to nothing of what's being asked), these questions often need to be read, and sometimes even understood, in order to make an educated assessment of how bad they are.

Only show what the reviewer is comfortable evaluating

This last reason is easy enough to fix: only show posts tagged with either of one of the reviewer's favorite tags or one of the tags in which the reviewer has a bronze badge.

Give more incentive to weed through the trash

With respect to the second and third reasons, I'd like to suggest that any "Unsalvageable" or "Needs improvement" vote cast on a question that ultimately gets published as "Looks OK" without modifications should automatically count as a down-vote.

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Denis de Bernardy
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  • 21

As things stand, I'd be willing to wager that this experiment will fail miserably. Primarily for three reasons.

First and foremost, a pig with lipstick is still a pig. Users don't like reading SO's front page once they've decided it's an ocean of trash. I'm therefor at a loss as to why they'd suddenly want to go through the very worst of the trash they're actively avoiding, for the mere reason that it's presented in a slightly different format -- and without the appeasing satisfaction of rabidly casting down-votes to boot.

Secondly, and as a result of the this, potential reviewers have absolutely no incentive to dive in this cesspool.

Thirdly, and least importantly, it's evident in the queue's history that quality standards are very different from one reviewer to the next. Some questions, which I'd rate as objectively "Get out of my face" unsalvageable, apparently look OK for other reviewers.

Give more incentive to weed through the trash

With respect to the last two reasons, I'd like to suggest that any "Unsalvageable" or "Needs improvement" vote cast on a question that ultimately gets published as "Looks OK" without modifications should automatically count as a down-vote.

If that is not acceptable, than at the very least give the opportunity to cast a downvote then and there.

If it is acceptable, a further incentive to make reviewers exhaust their review quotas would be to make it so that this downvote does not count against daily vote limits.

(As a side note, the same could be an incentive for users to visit the Close-Vote queue more often.)

Stop the trash at the gate

With respect to the first reason, much more must to be done in order to ensure that posters don't flood the site with junk to begin with imho, so as to stop the trash at the city gates rather than in the town center when it's all over your face.

In the flow chart, I believe extra steps are needed prior to new questions getting sent to the queue. The point would be to make it impeccably clear upfront that a question will not even get published, let alone answered, if it is too low quality.

Very low score questions

If a question's score is very low, it should get rejected outright with a notice:

Your question raised too many low qualify flags. Left as is, it will not even be reviewed for consideration.

Please take some time to review our guides on writing a good question if you haven't done so already, and amend your question accordingly.

It doesn't matter of there are false positives here. Authors of good questions with a very low score will expand on theirs a bit more and move on with their day. What matters is catching as many genuine positives as possible; this "very low score" needs to be high enough that posters of undesirable questions find it user hostile.

Duplicates

With respect to potential duplicates, some javascript should fill in a hidden field that increments a counter when OP visits URLs the system suspects are duplicates -- suspected dups where OP didn't even bother to read prior art should get a more significant penalty. Ideally, OP should be required to list at least one of these URLs within the question, and explain why the problem is different.

Low scored questions

If a question's score is better simply low enough, the form should stall the submission and notify the poster of potential problems:

Your question raised several of our low quality flags. If you leave things as is and re-submit this form, the question will be pushed to a triage queue.

The triage queue is where reviewers will decide whether you question fits our quality standards or not. When not, they may prompt you to improve your question or delete it outright, before it even appears on the site.

Before re-submitting this form, please take some time to review our guides on writing a good question if you haven't done so already, and amend your question if you feel it is necessary.

Offer an alternative to freeform questions

In each case, and perhaps for all questions or for some other set of rather low quality questions, the submission form should change from freeform to structured.

Currently, it is freeform and it stems from the database schema:

Title: [                   ]
[                          ]
[                          ]
[                          ]
Tags: [                    ]

It should get turned into something like this instead, in order to guide the user into writing his question:

Title: [                   ]
Introduce your problem in two or three lines:
[                          ]
[                          ]
[                          ]
Give additional details on your problem, if appropriate:
[                          ]
[                          ]
[                          ]
Describe how to reproduce your problem, if appropriate:
[                          ]
[                          ]
[                          ]
...
Tags: [                    ]

Add a quality meter

While we're at it, we could additionally expose some kind of question quality meter as a question gets typed:

Question Quality: [####                    ] (What's this?)