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Have you ever had that sinking feeling when you realize—just a split second too late—that you shouldn’t have clicked “Okay” in the “Are you sure you want to quit?” dialog?

 

Yes? Well, you’re in good company—everybody has had a similar experience, so there’s no need to feel ashamed about it. It’s not your fault: it’s your software’s fault.

 

Why? Because software should “know” that we form habits. Software should know that after clicking “Okay” countless times in response to the question, we’ll probably click “Okay” this time too, even if we don’t mean to. Software should know that we won’t have a chance to think before accidentally throwing our work away.

 

Why should it know these things? Because software designers should know that we form habits, whether we want to or not.

 

Habit formation is actually good thing: it saves us the trouble of having to think when confronted with interface banalities and it lessens the probability that our train of thought will get derailed. In the case of the “Are you sure you want to quit?” dialog, our hands have memorized close-and-click as a single continuous gesture. That’s good, because most of the time we don’t want to think about the question—we just do the right thing. Unfortunately, our habits sometimes make us do the wrong thing: we don’t even have time to realize our mistake until after we’ve made it.

 

So, as designers we are led to a general interface principle: If an interface is to be humane, it must respect habituation.

Have you ever had that sinking feeling when you realize—just a split second too late—that you shouldn’t have clicked “Okay” in the “Are you sure you want to quit?” dialog?

 

Yes? Well, you’re in good company—everybody has had a similar experience, so there’s no need to feel ashamed about it. It’s not your fault: it’s your software’s fault.

 

Why? Because software should “know” that we form habits. Software should know that after clicking “Okay” countless times in response to the question, we’ll probably click “Okay” this time too, even if we don’t mean to. Software should know that we won’t have a chance to think before accidentally throwing our work away.

 

Why should it know these things? Because software designers should know that we form habits, whether we want to or not.

 

Habit formation is actually good thing: it saves us the trouble of having to think when confronted with interface banalities and it lessens the probability that our train of thought will get derailed. In the case of the “Are you sure you want to quit?” dialog, our hands have memorized close-and-click as a single continuous gesture. That’s good, because most of the time we don’t want to think about the question—we just do the right thing. Unfortunately, our habits sometimes make us do the wrong thing: we don’t even have time to realize our mistake until after we’ve made it.

 

So, as designers we are led to a general interface principle: If an interface is to be humane, it must respect habituation.

Have you ever had that sinking feeling when you realize—just a split second too late—that you shouldn’t have clicked “Okay” in the “Are you sure you want to quit?” dialog?

Yes? Well, you’re in good company—everybody has had a similar experience, so there’s no need to feel ashamed about it. It’s not your fault: it’s your software’s fault.

Why? Because software should “know” that we form habits. Software should know that after clicking “Okay” countless times in response to the question, we’ll probably click “Okay” this time too, even if we don’t mean to. Software should know that we won’t have a chance to think before accidentally throwing our work away.

Why should it know these things? Because software designers should know that we form habits, whether we want to or not.

Habit formation is actually good thing: it saves us the trouble of having to think when confronted with interface banalities and it lessens the probability that our train of thought will get derailed. In the case of the “Are you sure you want to quit?” dialog, our hands have memorized close-and-click as a single continuous gesture. That’s good, because most of the time we don’t want to think about the question—we just do the right thing. Unfortunately, our habits sometimes make us do the wrong thing: we don’t even have time to realize our mistake until after we’ve made it.

So, as designers we are led to a general interface principle: If an interface is to be humane, it must respect habituation.

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  1. As is discussed in the article, we should not apply more force to defeat habituation. ("Hall of Shame" type solution: require users to type a different letter of the keyboard to go on to the next step. This does not work like wishful thinking would have it; it just results in habituation with added annoyance and anger.)

  2. What would work in reducing the problem, without shutting people out immediately or completely, is a system of anti-privileges from anti-badges. This could include throttling posting privileges in some degree. Or, os the server side, page load time could progressively be slowed: people who habituate and ignore (like the rest of us) may think twice if page loads get slower and slower for each bad post.

The immediate application is that the only response I see that not be partly neutralized by habituation is force that throttles or stops the user from certain conduct. Now the Clippy response is appropriate here; so might be other changes like making it much more obvious how to mark a pasted input as code (question: can SO's software distinguish postingpasting a block of code from postingpasting text from a natural language), but the basic approaches sounds carefully thought out, probably undersells the OP's irritation considerably, and in my opinion will only work if they are non-optional, perhaps due to anti-privileges.

  1. As is discussed in the article, we should not apply more force to defeat habituation. ("Hall of Shame" type solution: require users to type a different letter of the keyboard to go on to the next step. This does not work like wishful thinking would have it; it just results in habituation with added annoyance and anger.)

  2. What would work in reducing the problem, without shutting people out immediately or completely, is a system of anti-privileges from anti-badges. This could include throttling posting privileges in some degree.

The immediate application is that the only response I see that not be partly neutralized by habituation is force that throttles or stops the user from certain conduct. Now the Clippy response is appropriate here; so might be other changes like making it much more obvious how to mark a pasted input as code (question: can SO's software distinguish posting a block of code from posting text from a natural language), but the basic approaches sounds carefully thought out, probably undersells the OP's irritation considerably, and in my opinion will only work if they are non-optional, perhaps due to anti-privileges.

  1. As is discussed in the article, we should not apply more force to defeat habituation. ("Hall of Shame" type solution: require users to type a different letter of the keyboard to go on to the next step. This does not work like wishful thinking would have it; it just results in habituation with added annoyance and anger.)

  2. What would work in reducing the problem, without shutting people out immediately or completely, is a system of anti-privileges from anti-badges. This could include throttling posting privileges in some degree. Or, os the server side, page load time could progressively be slowed: people who habituate and ignore (like the rest of us) may think twice if page loads get slower and slower for each bad post.

The immediate application is that the only response I see that not be partly neutralized by habituation is force that throttles or stops the user from certain conduct. Now the Clippy response is appropriate here; so might be other changes like making it much more obvious how to mark a pasted input as code (question: can SO's software distinguish pasting a block of code from pasting text from a natural language), but the basic approaches sounds carefully thought out, probably undersells the OP's irritation considerably, and in my opinion will only work if they are non-optional, perhaps due to anti-privileges.

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I don't know if the broken window theory applies (it probably does), but if I may summarize your position in a sentence, "There are all sorts of opt-in resources available to help people ask less inappropriate questions, but I think only those matter that stand between the user and making the post." I see 10 upvotes next to '''And as a last resort, "We noticed you pressed the "Continue" button 5 times in a row inside 3 seconds. You probably did not read the advice. Click here to go back to Step 1".''' It wasn't written by you, but it fits your advice and your irritation perfectly.

The closest analogy I have read to your question is an A List Apart article summarized in its title, Never use a warning when you mean, "Undo". Now there are important differences, but the research and findings apply as well as if the article had almost been writing a response to your question. It begins:

Have you ever had that sinking feeling when you realize—just a split second too late—that you shouldn’t have clicked “Okay” in the “Are you sure you want to quit?” dialog?

Yes? Well, you’re in good company—everybody has had a similar experience, so there’s no need to feel ashamed about it. It’s not your fault: it’s your software’s fault.

Why? Because software should “know” that we form habits. Software should know that after clicking “Okay” countless times in response to the question, we’ll probably click “Okay” this time too, even if we don’t mean to. Software should know that we won’t have a chance to think before accidentally throwing our work away.

Why should it know these things? Because software designers should know that we form habits, whether we want to or not.

Habit formation is actually good thing: it saves us the trouble of having to think when confronted with interface banalities and it lessens the probability that our train of thought will get derailed. In the case of the “Are you sure you want to quit?” dialog, our hands have memorized close-and-click as a single continuous gesture. That’s good, because most of the time we don’t want to think about the question—we just do the right thing. Unfortunately, our habits sometimes make us do the wrong thing: we don’t even have time to realize our mistake until after we’ve made it.

So, as designers we are led to a general interface principle: If an interface is to be humane, it must respect habituation.

My point in bringing in this up is that any and all measures such as you describe are subject to habituation. Including, perhaps, pressing "Continue" x times within y seconds; people will habituate and count up enough time in their watch to pass the check for "enough seconds between first and last Continue" buttons being clicked.

There are two obvious takeaways:

  1. As is discussed in the article, we should not apply more force to defeat habituation. ("Hall of Shame" type solution: require users to type a different letter of the keyboard to go on to the next step. This does not work like wishful thinking would have it; it just results in habituation with added annoyance and anger.)

  2. What would work in reducing the problem, without shutting people out immediately or completely, is a system of anti-privileges from anti-badges. This could include throttling posting privileges in some degree.

I'm not completely sure what is appropriate here, but I'd be crossing my fingers a little to claim complete agreement with the OP, even though the OP has a gripe that's on lots of people's chests. In the non-hostile context of Never say a warning when you mean, "Undo", structuring software to gracefully allow recovery when you do something wrong and realize what you did was wrong; warnings are simply no adequate substitute to the harder job of facilitating graceful recovery.

The immediate application is that the only response I see that not be partly neutralized by habituation is force that throttles or stops the user from certain conduct. Now the Clippy response is appropriate here; so might be other changes like making it much more obvious how to mark a pasted input as code (question: can SO's software distinguish posting a block of code from posting text from a natural language), but the basic approaches sounds carefully thought out, probably undersells the OP's irritation considerably, and in my opinion will only work if they are non-optional, perhaps due to anti-privileges.

Would it be productive to make an anti-privilege, anti-badge system?