Timeline for Should 1 rep users be allowed to write documentation?
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
18 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Jul 25, 2016 at 16:12 | comment | added | e4c5 | yep @sayse I am not going back until down votes on docs actually result in reputation loss (right now it doesn't seem to happen) | |
Jul 25, 2016 at 14:14 | comment | added | Sayse |
Exactly this, at the minute it appears to me that it is being abused as a reputation cash cow as a way for people to gain reputation rather than as a way to contribute to something larger. I'm not going to reconsider participating in the docs until there is a [docs] magic link/help page similar to How to Ask, something that describes whatever it is actually supposed to do and be used for
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Jul 25, 2016 at 10:52 | comment | added | AkselA | @Cody Gray Isn't a bit of elitism exactly what we are requesting? Personally, as one who primarily uses this site as a source of knowledge, I'd be very interested in having the most knowledgeable provide most of the content. | |
Jul 24, 2016 at 6:02 | comment | added | peterh | @CodyGray You haven't too many SE accounts, maybe you don't know, that at the beginning of the new SE sites, there are much wider moderating privileges (for example, on private beta sites, everybody can vote for close/reopen). I suspect, this is the reason, why is it so easy to review/moderate on the doc SE now: the SE simply follows what they always did. As the doc SE matures, the wide moderating privileges will be probably limited, but the content producing (== reputation collecting) rights hopefully won't. | |
Jul 24, 2016 at 5:46 | comment | added | peterh | @CodyGray On the Q&A, you can post content even without registration. You can edit others content without a registration. You want forbid this, not only for the anons, but also for the low rep users, of course only on the doc SE. And you say that I would want an exceptional handling of the doc SE? | |
Jul 24, 2016 at 5:42 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | You still haven't provided a justification for why Docs should work differently from the rest of the site, @peter. You just keep accusing me of being an elitist, when that couldn't be further from the truth. You claim that I want "exceptional handling of the docs", but in that that is precisely what we have now. Docs is an exception in that anyone, including brand new users who have no idea how the site works and have yet to demonstrate a competence in the core subject area, can suggest modifications. And those modifications can be approved by someone else equally as uninformed. That's bad. | |
Jul 24, 2016 at 5:39 | comment | added | peterh | @CodyGray In this whole debate I can see only a group of preschoolers desperatively trying to "expropriate" the playground from the smaller kids. | |
Jul 24, 2016 at 5:26 | comment | added | peterh | @CodyGray Yes, you know very well what I am talking about. You only won't admit it. This is why you want exceptional handling of the docs. No, no exceptional handling of the docs is needed, community review process should decide, as always, and no reputation limit should exist. If the review system is bad (it looks it is bad), then it should be fixed, and not its usage should be limited to an inner circle of users. | |
Jul 24, 2016 at 5:10 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | I have no idea what you are talking about, @peter. I am very much in favor of community moderation. What I described is, however, the way that the site actually does work. Brand new users who have yet to earn any reputation do not have moderation privileges, except for in Documentation. New users are certainly able to gain privileges by gaining reputation by contributing in meaningful ways and demonstrating their knowledge. It is not an elitist system, it is a practical one. More importantly, moderation takes work. The best solution is to keep bad content from ever entering the system. | |
Jul 24, 2016 at 5:04 | comment | added | peterh | @CodyGray Bad content can be voted down, can be flagged for deletion, etc. It was always so, it is the essence of the whole SE: a review process decides the quality, and not a hardcoded privilege system. What you suggest, it is the style of the ancient usenet newsgroups and irc channels: where the oldboys were the demigods of their own trashpile and instead the community votes, the prestige determined a false illusion of quality. | |
Jul 24, 2016 at 4:55 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | @peter I don't see SE as anything like a game at all, and haven't for as long as I can remember. I couldn't give a crap about reputation for myself. But there is one significant reason that reputation matters: it is used as a measure of trust and grants the people who have it privileges on the site. So earning gobs and gobs of reputation for contributing shitty documentation creates a serious problem for the site. None of this has anything to do with money. I'm not here to play or earn brownie points. I'm here to learn, to help others, and to make the Internet a better place. | |
Jul 24, 2016 at 1:01 | comment | added | peterh | @CodyGray To me, SE is actually a pilot game. We are in a pyramide, trying to step up, but in the reality, it is only an intellectual trap to make free work. This is why I stopped collecting reputation after 3k, and this is my another reason, why I am not hurry up to make more money for the SE Inc. This doc SE is a good idea, but I played enough here already and my life is limited. On my opinion, it makes only the pilot game into a new level. | |
Jul 23, 2016 at 23:55 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | It's not just an "old users are stuck in a rut" problem. Many of us have tried in earnest to contribute, but have made the conscious decision to bow out because of frustration with systemic problems. Bad contributions getting approved, good contributions getting rejected, lack of clarity on what Documentation should look like, a frustrating and confusing interface, crippling bugs that should have been fixed in the private beta, etc. etc. Having some kind of minimum standard for participation would at least fix problems 1 and 2, which would go a long way towards making Docs useful in future. | |
Jul 23, 2016 at 23:50 | comment | added | e4c5 | you have a valid point there @peterh about everything being new for new users so they are trying out more thing. However as for the rules they are very different on documentation than in other places. For example in SO if you post a duplicate, off topic or low quality post it gets closed pretty quikcly. There isn't anything like that in doumentation | |
Jul 23, 2016 at 23:47 | comment | added | peterh | On my opinion, multiple high-rep votes should be able to override the poster decisions, so voted up. | |
Jul 23, 2016 at 23:45 | history | edited | Braiam | CC BY-SA 3.0 |
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Jul 23, 2016 at 23:41 | comment | added | peterh | Going to the doc SE is also a behavioral change, and old users tend to change their behaviors slower. This is my reason, too, although I know that early participation could lead probably to improved results on the long-term. Suddenly I've got a 3k+ doc SE account as a gift, well maybe I will once take part in the activites there, but not on the spot. For the new users is everything new, thus a significant part of them start their activities also there. The rules of the doc SE absolutely don't influence my this behavior, I don't even know them (I suspect they are similar to the other SE sites). | |
Jul 23, 2016 at 23:31 | history | answered | e4c5 | CC BY-SA 3.0 |