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Why is this a thought experiment? This already happens.

If all questions that should be closed were actually closed then there would be no need for automatic deletion of unclosed questions. There are currently 723 thousand unclosed questions723 thousand unclosed questions with a score of 0 or less and 0 answers, i.e. those that may eventually be deleted under the current criteria.

If we take question score as a proxy for the questions that will remain if close votes are removed that shouldn't there are currently 333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0. (Yes not all of these should be closed but not all questions with a higher score should be open - it's a good enough proxy for my point).

The site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need it - removing closing won't make any difference to the hundreds of thousands of questions that slip through the system.

Though good attempts are made to optimise for pearls more and more sand is creeping through the cracks in the clam's shell. By closing some, but not all, we're annoying some of both the sand-castle makers and the pearl divers.

I was going to suggest voting, as George has done, as the method of keeping things in check. Though I don't necessarily agree with the following potential methods of solving the issue, we do need a way of ensuring that someone searching for a problem can easily find the answer:

  • Idea 1 - remove from Google's index all questions with a score of 0 or less
  • Idea 2 - delete all questions with a score of 0 or less on 7 + score days after creation. If you've got your answer but aren't serving the greater good then everyone might (possibly!) be happy?

Fairly drastic, but I suspect that optimising for pearls rather than sand programmatically rather than socially may eventually become the only option. If this is done, why not annoy less people along the way?

Why is this a thought experiment? This already happens.

If all questions that should be closed were actually closed then there would be no need for automatic deletion of unclosed questions. There are currently 723 thousand unclosed questions with a score of 0 or less and 0 answers, i.e. those that may eventually be deleted under the current criteria.

If we take question score as a proxy for the questions that will remain if close votes are removed that shouldn't there are currently 333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0. (Yes not all of these should be closed but not all questions with a higher score should be open - it's a good enough proxy for my point).

The site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need it - removing closing won't make any difference to the hundreds of thousands of questions that slip through the system.

Though good attempts are made to optimise for pearls more and more sand is creeping through the cracks in the clam's shell. By closing some, but not all, we're annoying some of both the sand-castle makers and the pearl divers.

I was going to suggest voting, as George has done, as the method of keeping things in check. Though I don't necessarily agree with the following potential methods of solving the issue, we do need a way of ensuring that someone searching for a problem can easily find the answer:

  • Idea 1 - remove from Google's index all questions with a score of 0 or less
  • Idea 2 - delete all questions with a score of 0 or less on 7 + score days after creation. If you've got your answer but aren't serving the greater good then everyone might (possibly!) be happy?

Fairly drastic, but I suspect that optimising for pearls rather than sand programmatically rather than socially may eventually become the only option. If this is done, why not annoy less people along the way?

Why is this a thought experiment? This already happens.

If all questions that should be closed were actually closed then there would be no need for automatic deletion of unclosed questions. There are currently 723 thousand unclosed questions with a score of 0 or less and 0 answers, i.e. those that may eventually be deleted under the current criteria.

If we take question score as a proxy for the questions that will remain if close votes are removed that shouldn't there are currently 333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0. (Yes not all of these should be closed but not all questions with a higher score should be open - it's a good enough proxy for my point).

The site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need it - removing closing won't make any difference to the hundreds of thousands of questions that slip through the system.

Though good attempts are made to optimise for pearls more and more sand is creeping through the cracks in the clam's shell. By closing some, but not all, we're annoying some of both the sand-castle makers and the pearl divers.

I was going to suggest voting, as George has done, as the method of keeping things in check. Though I don't necessarily agree with the following potential methods of solving the issue, we do need a way of ensuring that someone searching for a problem can easily find the answer:

  • Idea 1 - remove from Google's index all questions with a score of 0 or less
  • Idea 2 - delete all questions with a score of 0 or less on 7 + score days after creation. If you've got your answer but aren't serving the greater good then everyone might (possibly!) be happy?

Fairly drastic, but I suspect that optimising for pearls rather than sand programmatically rather than socially may eventually become the only option. If this is done, why not annoy less people along the way?

replaced http://blog.stackoverflow.com with https://blog.stackoverflow.com
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Why is this a thought experiment? This already happens.

If all questions that should be closed were actually closed then there would be no need for automatic deletion of unclosed questions. There are currently 723 thousand unclosed questions with a score of 0 or less and 0 answers, i.e. those that may eventually be deleted under the current criteria.

If we take question score as a proxy for the questions that will remain if close votes are removed that shouldn't there are currently 333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0. (Yes not all of these should be closed but not all questions with a higher score should be open - it's a good enough proxy for my point).

The site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need it - removing closing won't make any difference to the hundreds of thousands of questions that slip through the system.

Though good attempts are made to optimise for pearlsoptimise for pearls more and more sand is creeping through the cracks in the clam's shell. By closing some, but not all, we're annoying some of both the sand-castle makers and the pearl divers.

I was going to suggest voting, as George has done, as the method of keeping things in check. Though I don't necessarily agree with the following potential methods of solving the issue, we do need a way of ensuring that someone searching for a problem can easily find the answer:

  • Idea 1 - remove from Google's index all questions with a score of 0 or less
  • Idea 2 - delete all questions with a score of 0 or less on 7 + score days after creation. If you've got your answer but aren't serving the greater good then everyone might (possibly!) be happy?

Fairly drastic, but I suspect that optimising for pearls rather than sand programmatically rather than socially may eventually become the only option. If this is done, why not annoy less people along the way?

Why is this a thought experiment? This already happens.

If all questions that should be closed were actually closed then there would be no need for automatic deletion of unclosed questions. There are currently 723 thousand unclosed questions with a score of 0 or less and 0 answers, i.e. those that may eventually be deleted under the current criteria.

If we take question score as a proxy for the questions that will remain if close votes are removed that shouldn't there are currently 333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0. (Yes not all of these should be closed but not all questions with a higher score should be open - it's a good enough proxy for my point).

The site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need it - removing closing won't make any difference to the hundreds of thousands of questions that slip through the system.

Though good attempts are made to optimise for pearls more and more sand is creeping through the cracks in the clam's shell. By closing some, but not all, we're annoying some of both the sand-castle makers and the pearl divers.

I was going to suggest voting, as George has done, as the method of keeping things in check. Though I don't necessarily agree with the following potential methods of solving the issue, we do need a way of ensuring that someone searching for a problem can easily find the answer:

  • Idea 1 - remove from Google's index all questions with a score of 0 or less
  • Idea 2 - delete all questions with a score of 0 or less on 7 + score days after creation. If you've got your answer but aren't serving the greater good then everyone might (possibly!) be happy?

Fairly drastic, but I suspect that optimising for pearls rather than sand programmatically rather than socially may eventually become the only option. If this is done, why not annoy less people along the way?

Why is this a thought experiment? This already happens.

If all questions that should be closed were actually closed then there would be no need for automatic deletion of unclosed questions. There are currently 723 thousand unclosed questions with a score of 0 or less and 0 answers, i.e. those that may eventually be deleted under the current criteria.

If we take question score as a proxy for the questions that will remain if close votes are removed that shouldn't there are currently 333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0. (Yes not all of these should be closed but not all questions with a higher score should be open - it's a good enough proxy for my point).

The site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need it - removing closing won't make any difference to the hundreds of thousands of questions that slip through the system.

Though good attempts are made to optimise for pearls more and more sand is creeping through the cracks in the clam's shell. By closing some, but not all, we're annoying some of both the sand-castle makers and the pearl divers.

I was going to suggest voting, as George has done, as the method of keeping things in check. Though I don't necessarily agree with the following potential methods of solving the issue, we do need a way of ensuring that someone searching for a problem can easily find the answer:

  • Idea 1 - remove from Google's index all questions with a score of 0 or less
  • Idea 2 - delete all questions with a score of 0 or less on 7 + score days after creation. If you've got your answer but aren't serving the greater good then everyone might (possibly!) be happy?

Fairly drastic, but I suspect that optimising for pearls rather than sand programmatically rather than socially may eventually become the only option. If this is done, why not annoy less people along the way?

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

Why is this a thought experiment? This already happens.

If all questions that should be closed were actually closed then there would be no need for automatic deletion of unclosed questionsautomatic deletion of unclosed questions. There are currently 723 thousand unclosed questions with a score of 0 or less and 0 answers, i.e. those that may eventually be deleted under the current criteria.

If we take question score as a proxy for the questions that will remain if close votes are removed that shouldn't there are currently 333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0. (Yes not all of these should be closed but not all questions with a higher score should be open - it's a good enough proxy for my point).

The site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need itThe site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need it - removing closing won't make any difference to the hundreds of thousands of questions that slip through the system.

Though good attempts are made to optimise for pearls more and more sand is creeping through the cracks in the clam's shell. By closing some, but not all, we're annoying some of both the sand-castle makers and the pearl divers.

I was going to suggest voting, as George has done, as the method of keeping things in check. Though I don't necessarily agree with the following potential methods of solving the issue, we do need a way of ensuring that someone searching for a problem can easily find the answer:

  • Idea 1 - remove from Google's index all questions with a score of 0 or less
  • Idea 2 - delete all questions with a score of 0 or less on 7 + score days after creation. If you've got your answer but aren't serving the greater good then everyone might (possibly!) be happy?

Fairly drastic, but I suspect that optimising for pearls rather than sand programmatically rather than socially may eventually become the only option. If this is done, why not annoy less people along the way?

Why is this a thought experiment? This already happens.

If all questions that should be closed were actually closed then there would be no need for automatic deletion of unclosed questions. There are currently 723 thousand unclosed questions with a score of 0 or less and 0 answers, i.e. those that may eventually be deleted under the current criteria.

If we take question score as a proxy for the questions that will remain if close votes are removed that shouldn't there are currently 333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0. (Yes not all of these should be closed but not all questions with a higher score should be open - it's a good enough proxy for my point).

The site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need it - removing closing won't make any difference to the hundreds of thousands of questions that slip through the system.

Though good attempts are made to optimise for pearls more and more sand is creeping through the cracks in the clam's shell. By closing some, but not all, we're annoying some of both the sand-castle makers and the pearl divers.

I was going to suggest voting, as George has done, as the method of keeping things in check. Though I don't necessarily agree with the following potential methods of solving the issue, we do need a way of ensuring that someone searching for a problem can easily find the answer:

  • Idea 1 - remove from Google's index all questions with a score of 0 or less
  • Idea 2 - delete all questions with a score of 0 or less on 7 + score days after creation. If you've got your answer but aren't serving the greater good then everyone might (possibly!) be happy?

Fairly drastic, but I suspect that optimising for pearls rather than sand programmatically rather than socially may eventually become the only option. If this is done, why not annoy less people along the way?

Why is this a thought experiment? This already happens.

If all questions that should be closed were actually closed then there would be no need for automatic deletion of unclosed questions. There are currently 723 thousand unclosed questions with a score of 0 or less and 0 answers, i.e. those that may eventually be deleted under the current criteria.

If we take question score as a proxy for the questions that will remain if close votes are removed that shouldn't there are currently 333k unclosed questions with a score less than 0. (Yes not all of these should be closed but not all questions with a higher score should be open - it's a good enough proxy for my point).

The site is already failing to keep up with closing all questions that might need it - removing closing won't make any difference to the hundreds of thousands of questions that slip through the system.

Though good attempts are made to optimise for pearls more and more sand is creeping through the cracks in the clam's shell. By closing some, but not all, we're annoying some of both the sand-castle makers and the pearl divers.

I was going to suggest voting, as George has done, as the method of keeping things in check. Though I don't necessarily agree with the following potential methods of solving the issue, we do need a way of ensuring that someone searching for a problem can easily find the answer:

  • Idea 1 - remove from Google's index all questions with a score of 0 or less
  • Idea 2 - delete all questions with a score of 0 or less on 7 + score days after creation. If you've got your answer but aren't serving the greater good then everyone might (possibly!) be happy?

Fairly drastic, but I suspect that optimising for pearls rather than sand programmatically rather than socially may eventually become the only option. If this is done, why not annoy less people along the way?

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