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replaced http://chat.meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://chat.meta.stackexchange.com/
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You are touching three issues, so lets try to segregate them:

  1. Audits are selected naively: This has been the griping of many reviewers since the start of the times. A post with a couple of upvotes (those are the the ones that cause most pain), which is actually out of the scope and/or makes eyes bleed and rot, gets selected as a "known good" question and presented to a knowledgeable user, which fails the audit test. I have a couple of ideasa couple of ideas to fix this, which involves discriminating the users who gave their votes for the post to be selected as audit.
  2. Users misunderstanding what a bounty implies: this is problematic. It seems like there wasn't proper guidance at the beginning, which created some kind of misunderstanding. I'm not sure if going the click-wall route can help with this. Certainly, it doesn't help the people asking questions.
  3. Users which upvotes post of questionable quality: and consistently doing so, is even more preoccupying. Yet it seems that anonymous users seems to get it Right™, so I'm not sure how to deal with it.

Basically, yes, you should be worried that users are incapable of identifying good content accurately and that it skews the other users and the site normal functionality.

You are touching three issues, so lets try to segregate them:

  1. Audits are selected naively: This has been the griping of many reviewers since the start of the times. A post with a couple of upvotes (those are the the ones that cause most pain), which is actually out of the scope and/or makes eyes bleed and rot, gets selected as a "known good" question and presented to a knowledgeable user, which fails the audit test. I have a couple of ideas to fix this, which involves discriminating the users who gave their votes for the post to be selected as audit.
  2. Users misunderstanding what a bounty implies: this is problematic. It seems like there wasn't proper guidance at the beginning, which created some kind of misunderstanding. I'm not sure if going the click-wall route can help with this. Certainly, it doesn't help the people asking questions.
  3. Users which upvotes post of questionable quality: and consistently doing so, is even more preoccupying. Yet it seems that anonymous users seems to get it Right™, so I'm not sure how to deal with it.

Basically, yes, you should be worried that users are incapable of identifying good content accurately and that it skews the other users and the site normal functionality.

You are touching three issues, so lets try to segregate them:

  1. Audits are selected naively: This has been the griping of many reviewers since the start of the times. A post with a couple of upvotes (those are the the ones that cause most pain), which is actually out of the scope and/or makes eyes bleed and rot, gets selected as a "known good" question and presented to a knowledgeable user, which fails the audit test. I have a couple of ideas to fix this, which involves discriminating the users who gave their votes for the post to be selected as audit.
  2. Users misunderstanding what a bounty implies: this is problematic. It seems like there wasn't proper guidance at the beginning, which created some kind of misunderstanding. I'm not sure if going the click-wall route can help with this. Certainly, it doesn't help the people asking questions.
  3. Users which upvotes post of questionable quality: and consistently doing so, is even more preoccupying. Yet it seems that anonymous users seems to get it Right™, so I'm not sure how to deal with it.

Basically, yes, you should be worried that users are incapable of identifying good content accurately and that it skews the other users and the site normal functionality.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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You are touching three issues, so lets try to segregate them:

  1. Audits are selected naively: This has been the griping of many reviewers since the start of the times. A post with a couple of upvotes (those are the the ones that cause most pain), which is actually out of the scope and/or makes eyes bleed and rot, gets selected as a "known good" question and presented to a knowledgeable user, which fails the audit test. I have a couple of ideas to fix this, which involves discriminating the users who gave their votes for the post to be selected as audit.
  2. Users misunderstanding what a bounty implies: thisthis is problematic. It seems like there wasn't proper guidance at the beginning, which created some kind of misunderstanding. I'm not sure if going the click-wall route can help with this. Certainly, it doesn't help the people asking questions.
  3. Users which upvotes post of questionable quality: and consistently doing soconsistently doing so, is even more preoccupying. Yet it seems that anonymous usersanonymous users seems to get it Right™, so I'm not sure how to deal with it.

Basically, yes, you should be worried that users are incapable of identifying good content accurately and that it skews the other users and the site normal functionality.

You are touching three issues, so lets try to segregate them:

  1. Audits are selected naively: This has been the griping of many reviewers since the start of the times. A post with a couple of upvotes (those are the the ones that cause most pain), which is actually out of the scope and/or makes eyes bleed and rot, gets selected as a "known good" question and presented to a knowledgeable user, which fails the audit test. I have a couple of ideas to fix this, which involves discriminating the users who gave their votes for the post to be selected as audit.
  2. Users misunderstanding what a bounty implies: this is problematic. It seems like there wasn't proper guidance at the beginning, which created some kind of misunderstanding. I'm not sure if going the click-wall route can help with this. Certainly, it doesn't help the people asking questions.
  3. Users which upvotes post of questionable quality: and consistently doing so, is even more preoccupying. Yet it seems that anonymous users seems to get it Right™, so I'm not sure how to deal with it.

Basically, yes, you should be worried that users are incapable of identifying good content accurately and that it skews the other users and the site normal functionality.

You are touching three issues, so lets try to segregate them:

  1. Audits are selected naively: This has been the griping of many reviewers since the start of the times. A post with a couple of upvotes (those are the the ones that cause most pain), which is actually out of the scope and/or makes eyes bleed and rot, gets selected as a "known good" question and presented to a knowledgeable user, which fails the audit test. I have a couple of ideas to fix this, which involves discriminating the users who gave their votes for the post to be selected as audit.
  2. Users misunderstanding what a bounty implies: this is problematic. It seems like there wasn't proper guidance at the beginning, which created some kind of misunderstanding. I'm not sure if going the click-wall route can help with this. Certainly, it doesn't help the people asking questions.
  3. Users which upvotes post of questionable quality: and consistently doing so, is even more preoccupying. Yet it seems that anonymous users seems to get it Right™, so I'm not sure how to deal with it.

Basically, yes, you should be worried that users are incapable of identifying good content accurately and that it skews the other users and the site normal functionality.

typo (naivety -> naively)
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Glorfindel
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You are touching three issues, so lets try to segregate them:

  1. Audits are selected naivetynaively: This has been the griping of many reviewers since the start of the times. A post with a couple of upvotes (those are the the ones that cause most pain), which is actually out of the scope and/or makes eyes bleed and rot, gets selected as a "known good" question and presented to a knowledgeable user, which fails the audit test. I have a couple of ideas to fix this, which involves discriminating the users who gave their votes for the post to be selected as audit.
  2. Users misunderstanding what a bounty implies: this is problematic. It seems like there wasn't proper guidance at the beginning, which created some kind of misunderstanding. I'm not sure if going the click-wall route can help with this. Certainly, it doesn't help the people asking questions.
  3. Users which upvotes post of questionable quality: and consistently doing so, is even more preoccupying. Yet it seems that anonymous users seems to get it Right™, so I'm not sure how to deal with it.

Basically, yes, you should be worried that users are incapable of identifying good content accurately and that it skews the other users and the site normal functionality.

You are touching three issues, so lets try to segregate them:

  1. Audits are selected naivety: This has been the griping of many reviewers since the start of the times. A post with a couple of upvotes (those are the the ones that cause most pain), which is actually out of the scope and/or makes eyes bleed and rot, gets selected as a "known good" question and presented to a knowledgeable user, which fails the audit test. I have a couple of ideas to fix this, which involves discriminating the users who gave their votes for the post to be selected as audit.
  2. Users misunderstanding what a bounty implies: this is problematic. It seems like there wasn't proper guidance at the beginning, which created some kind of misunderstanding. I'm not sure if going the click-wall route can help with this. Certainly, it doesn't help the people asking questions.
  3. Users which upvotes post of questionable quality: and consistently doing so, is even more preoccupying. Yet it seems that anonymous users seems to get it Right™, so I'm not sure how to deal with it.

Basically, yes, you should be worried that users are incapable of identifying good content accurately and that it skews the other users and the site normal functionality.

You are touching three issues, so lets try to segregate them:

  1. Audits are selected naively: This has been the griping of many reviewers since the start of the times. A post with a couple of upvotes (those are the the ones that cause most pain), which is actually out of the scope and/or makes eyes bleed and rot, gets selected as a "known good" question and presented to a knowledgeable user, which fails the audit test. I have a couple of ideas to fix this, which involves discriminating the users who gave their votes for the post to be selected as audit.
  2. Users misunderstanding what a bounty implies: this is problematic. It seems like there wasn't proper guidance at the beginning, which created some kind of misunderstanding. I'm not sure if going the click-wall route can help with this. Certainly, it doesn't help the people asking questions.
  3. Users which upvotes post of questionable quality: and consistently doing so, is even more preoccupying. Yet it seems that anonymous users seems to get it Right™, so I'm not sure how to deal with it.

Basically, yes, you should be worried that users are incapable of identifying good content accurately and that it skews the other users and the site normal functionality.

added 17 characters in body
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Braiam
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Braiam
  • 4.5k
  • 13
  • 154
  • 265
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