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Kevin Workman
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This suggestion suffers from the same problems that the other suggestions suffer from:

  • Adding mandatory hurdles to asking questions is a non-starter. We absolutely do not want to annoy new users. Forcing them to click through some "let's review some questions first" dialogs is going to make most people (including people who would ask good questions) go somewhere else.

    Adding mandatory hurdles to asking questions is a non-starter. We absolutely do not want to annoy new users. Forcing them to click through some "let's review some questions first" dialogs is going to make most people (including people who would ask good questions) go somewhere else.

  • On the other hand, making it completely optional means that the majority of problematic users aren't going to ever see it.

    On the other hand, making it completely optional means that the majority of problematic users aren't going to ever see it. If they don't read the stuff we show them now, they certainly aren't going to jump through any other hoops.

So, we've got a bit of a paradox. We don't want to annoy the good, but the bad and the ugly won't click anywhere other than posting their question as quickly as possible.

Honestly, the existing downvotes and closevotes go pretty far to educating new users. I think we'd have better luck expanding what already works instead of tacking on additional hoops that people have to jump through.

Just thinking out loud, but the piece that seems missing is that after a post has been downvoted and closed, it's not very likely that it will ever be reopened, even if the user improves their question. So there isn't much incentive to improve questions. We need to make this pathway much smoother, to both new users whose questions have been downvoted and closed, and to users who are downvoting and closing questions in the first place.

This suggestion suffers from the same problems that the other suggestions suffer from:

  • Adding mandatory hurdles to asking questions is a non-starter. We absolutely do not want to annoy new users. Forcing them to click through some "let's review some questions first" dialogs is going to make most people (including people who would ask good questions) go somewhere else.
  • On the other hand, making it completely optional means that the majority of problematic users aren't going to ever see it.

So, we've got a bit of a paradox. We don't want to annoy the good, but the bad and the ugly won't click anywhere other than posting their question as quickly as possible.

Honestly, the existing downvotes and closevotes go pretty far to educating new users. I think we'd have better luck expanding what already works instead of tacking on additional hoops that people have to jump through.

Just thinking out loud, but the piece that seems missing is that after a post has been downvoted and closed, it's not very likely that it will ever be reopened, even if the user improves their question. So there isn't much incentive to improve questions. We need to make this pathway much smoother, to both new users whose questions have been downvoted and closed, and to users who are downvoting and closing questions in the first place.

This suggestion suffers from the same problems that the other suggestions suffer from:

  • Adding mandatory hurdles to asking questions is a non-starter. We absolutely do not want to annoy new users. Forcing them to click through some "let's review some questions first" dialogs is going to make most people (including people who would ask good questions) go somewhere else.

  • On the other hand, making it completely optional means that the majority of problematic users aren't going to ever see it. If they don't read the stuff we show them now, they certainly aren't going to jump through any other hoops.

So, we've got a bit of a paradox. We don't want to annoy the good, but the bad and the ugly won't click anywhere other than posting their question as quickly as possible.

Honestly, the existing downvotes and closevotes go pretty far to educating new users. I think we'd have better luck expanding what already works instead of tacking on additional hoops that people have to jump through.

Just thinking out loud, but the piece that seems missing is that after a post has been downvoted and closed, it's not very likely that it will ever be reopened, even if the user improves their question. So there isn't much incentive to improve questions. We need to make this pathway much smoother, to both new users whose questions have been downvoted and closed, and to users who are downvoting and closing questions in the first place.

Source Link
Kevin Workman
  • 42.1k
  • 3
  • 26
  • 32

This suggestion suffers from the same problems that the other suggestions suffer from:

  • Adding mandatory hurdles to asking questions is a non-starter. We absolutely do not want to annoy new users. Forcing them to click through some "let's review some questions first" dialogs is going to make most people (including people who would ask good questions) go somewhere else.
  • On the other hand, making it completely optional means that the majority of problematic users aren't going to ever see it.

So, we've got a bit of a paradox. We don't want to annoy the good, but the bad and the ugly won't click anywhere other than posting their question as quickly as possible.

Honestly, the existing downvotes and closevotes go pretty far to educating new users. I think we'd have better luck expanding what already works instead of tacking on additional hoops that people have to jump through.

Just thinking out loud, but the piece that seems missing is that after a post has been downvoted and closed, it's not very likely that it will ever be reopened, even if the user improves their question. So there isn't much incentive to improve questions. We need to make this pathway much smoother, to both new users whose questions have been downvoted and closed, and to users who are downvoting and closing questions in the first place.