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Makoto
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James Wilkins
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I've noticed a trend going on over the years. As newer answers come in (for example, the ever changing .NET Core libraries and specifications) I keep getting bogged down by answers that are no longer relevant, with better answers being lower down due to low scores because they are new.

I think it makes sense that votes should only be locked for 1-2 years, then allow people to undo a vote in order to re-cast it. This can allow people to undo a vote on an old answer in favor of a newer answer.

This can only be done perhaps if a new answer arrives to an old question (preventing people from trying to game the system, which I know is what vote locking was for). At the moment, people can only change the vote if the answer updates, but I propose it be allowed on new answers to an old question as well.

Old answers at the top are throwing people off completely, wasting lots of people's time later figuring out the top answer is actually out of date! If find this is starting to make Stack Overflow less and less reliable for me, with new valid and previously valid old answers mixed everywhere.

(this would also have the effect of making people keep top answers up to date, or lose their top position for newer answers, which I think is good as newer generations of people join the site over years)

Thoughts?

I've noticed a trend going on over the years. As newer answers come in (for example, the ever changing .NET Core libraries and specifications) I keep getting bogged down by answers that are no longer relevant, with better answers being lower down due to low scores because they are new.

I think it makes sense that votes should only be locked for 1-2 years, then allow people to undo a vote in order to re-cast it. This can allow people to undo a vote on an old answer in favor of a newer answer.

This can only be done perhaps if a new answer arrives to an old question (preventing people from trying to game the system, which I know is what vote locking was for). At the moment, people can only change the vote if the answer updates, but I propose it be allowed on new answers to an old question as well.

Old answers at the top are throwing people off completely, wasting lots of people's time later figuring out the top answer is actually out of date! If find this is starting to make Stack Overflow less and less reliable for me, with new valid and previously valid old answers mixed everywhere.

Thoughts?

I've noticed a trend going on over the years. As newer answers come in (for example, the ever changing .NET Core libraries and specifications) I keep getting bogged down by answers that are no longer relevant, with better answers being lower down due to low scores because they are new.

I think it makes sense that votes should only be locked for 1-2 years, then allow people to undo a vote in order to re-cast it. This can allow people to undo a vote on an old answer in favor of a newer answer.

This can only be done perhaps if a new answer arrives to an old question (preventing people from trying to game the system, which I know is what vote locking was for). At the moment, people can only change the vote if the answer updates, but I propose it be allowed on new answers to an old question as well.

Old answers at the top are throwing people off completely, wasting lots of people's time later figuring out the top answer is actually out of date! If find this is starting to make Stack Overflow less and less reliable for me, with new valid and previously valid old answers mixed everywhere.

(this would also have the effect of making people keep top answers up to date, or lose their top position for newer answers, which I think is good as newer generations of people join the site over years)

Thoughts?

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James Wilkins
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I've noticed a trend going on over the years. As newer answers come in (for example, the ever changing .NET Core libraries and specifications) I keep getting bogged down by answers that are no longer relevant, with better answers being lower down due to low scores because they are new.

I think it makes sense that votes should only be locked for 1-2 years, then allow people to undo a vote in order to re-cast it. This can allow people to undo a vote on an old answer in favor of a newer answer.

This can only be done perhaps if a new answer arrives to an old question (preventing people from trying to game the system, which I know is what vote locking was for). At the moment, people can only change the vote if the answer updates, but I propose it be allowed on new answers to an old question as well.

Another related issue is that a lot of users who upvoted an old answer probably won't even see newOld answers (anytime soon, perhaps eventually), or don't care because they are with a company that won't use a newer framework or something until battle tested. That means only the new users trickling in are upvoting, keeping the old answer at the top, and are throwing people off completely, wasting lots of people's time later figuring out the top answer is actually out of date! ThisIf find this is starting to make Stack Overflow less and less usefulreliable for me, with new valid and previously valid old answers mixed everywhere.

Thoughts?

I've noticed a trend going on over the years. As newer answers come in (for example, the ever changing .NET Core libraries and specifications) I keep getting bogged down by answers that are no longer relevant, with better answers being lower down due to low scores because they are new.

I think it makes sense that votes should only be locked for 1-2 years, then allow people to undo a vote in order to re-cast it. This can allow people to undo a vote on an old answer in favor of a newer answer.

This can only be done perhaps if a new answer arrives to an old question (preventing people from trying to game the system, which I know is what vote locking was for). At the moment, people can only change the vote if the answer updates, but I propose it be allowed on new answers to an old question as well.

Another related issue is that a lot of users who upvoted an old answer probably won't even see new answers (anytime soon, perhaps eventually), or don't care because they are with a company that won't use a newer framework or something until battle tested. That means only the new users trickling in are upvoting, keeping the old answer at the top, and throwing people off completely, wasting lots of people's time later figuring out the top answer is actually out of date! This is starting to make Stack Overflow less and less useful for me, with new valid and previously valid old answers mixed everywhere.

Thoughts?

I've noticed a trend going on over the years. As newer answers come in (for example, the ever changing .NET Core libraries and specifications) I keep getting bogged down by answers that are no longer relevant, with better answers being lower down due to low scores because they are new.

I think it makes sense that votes should only be locked for 1-2 years, then allow people to undo a vote in order to re-cast it. This can allow people to undo a vote on an old answer in favor of a newer answer.

This can only be done perhaps if a new answer arrives to an old question (preventing people from trying to game the system, which I know is what vote locking was for). At the moment, people can only change the vote if the answer updates, but I propose it be allowed on new answers to an old question as well.

Old answers at the top are throwing people off completely, wasting lots of people's time later figuring out the top answer is actually out of date! If find this is starting to make Stack Overflow less and less reliable for me, with new valid and previously valid old answers mixed everywhere.

Thoughts?

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Cody Gray Mod
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James Wilkins
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James Wilkins
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Active reading [<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.NET_Framework#.NET_Core>]
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Peter Mortensen
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James Wilkins
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James Wilkins
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