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TylerH
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I've seen some weird stuff coming from high-rep users. I won't post identifying information to avoid invoking the Meta effect, but I'll try to sketch in broad terms what my concerns are.

In one case, a user with 100K+ rep upvoted (and took credit for doing so in a comment) a junk question that was later closed as "unclear" with -11 votes. I actually flagged the comment for moderation because I was concerned that the user's account had been hacked. The flag was marked "helpful".

In another case, ana 15K+ user posted a question you'd expect from a brand new user in their first high school programming course. This question got a -9 score and 4 close votes before the asker deleted it.

This user has quite a few well-received and well-written questions, although the top question is a shameless request for opinions about competing libraries posted in 2015 which cannot be deleted because it serves as a dup-target. They post a lot of "which is better" opinion-based questions that get upvoted and fewer actual on-topic questions.

I try to uphold what I understand to be the guiding principle of Stack Overflow, where helping the asker is a worthwhile but ultimately secondary goal to building a long-lived resource for future users. To maintain quality, it is necessary to downvote and close questions that are low-quality using a simple criterion:

If someone else encountered a similar situation, would the contents of this question make it findable in a meaningful way, does it contain enough information for an average user with knowledge in its tags to understand the question, and is it written in a way that will attract answers of value?

My questions for Meta are (all related):

  1. Is my understanding of the Stack Overflow raison d'être still valid?

  2. These questions that are off-topic but protected by dup-target-links are like cysts in the tissue of Stack Overflow. They are not terribly damaging, but their usefulness will eventually decay, possibly into negative value territory. Is it worth putting any effort towards cleaning these up?

  3. Does this sound like I'm suffering from XKCD's "Somebody is wrong on the Internet" syndrome, so I should take a long break from Stack Overflow?

I've seen some weird stuff coming from high-rep users. I won't post identifying information to avoid invoking the Meta effect, but I'll try to sketch in broad terms what my concerns are.

In one case, a user with 100K+ rep upvoted (and took credit for doing so in a comment) a junk question that was later closed as "unclear" with -11 votes. I actually flagged the comment for moderation because I was concerned that the user's account had been hacked. The flag was marked "helpful".

In another case, an 15K+ user posted a question you'd expect from a brand new user in their first high school programming course. This question got a -9 score and 4 close votes before the asker deleted it.

This user has quite a few well-received and well-written questions, although the top question is a shameless request for opinions about competing libraries posted in 2015 which cannot be deleted because it serves as a dup-target. They post a lot of "which is better" opinion-based questions that get upvoted and fewer actual on-topic questions.

I try to uphold what I understand to be the guiding principle of Stack Overflow, where helping the asker is a worthwhile but ultimately secondary goal to building a long-lived resource for future users. To maintain quality, it is necessary to downvote and close questions that are low-quality using a simple criterion:

If someone else encountered a similar situation, would the contents of this question make it findable in a meaningful way, does it contain enough information for an average user with knowledge in its tags to understand the question, and is it written in a way that will attract answers of value?

My questions for Meta are (all related):

  1. Is my understanding of the Stack Overflow raison d'être still valid?

  2. These questions that are off-topic but protected by dup-target-links are like cysts in the tissue of Stack Overflow. They are not terribly damaging, but their usefulness will eventually decay, possibly into negative value territory. Is it worth putting any effort towards cleaning these up?

  3. Does this sound like I'm suffering from XKCD's "Somebody is wrong on the Internet" syndrome, so I should take a long break from Stack Overflow?

I've seen some weird stuff coming from high-rep users. I won't post identifying information to avoid invoking the Meta effect, but I'll try to sketch in broad terms what my concerns are.

In one case, a user with 100K+ rep upvoted (and took credit for doing so in a comment) a junk question that was later closed as "unclear" with -11 votes. I actually flagged the comment for moderation because I was concerned that the user's account had been hacked. The flag was marked "helpful".

In another case, a 15K+ user posted a question you'd expect from a brand new user in their first high school programming course. This question got a -9 score and 4 close votes before the asker deleted it.

This user has quite a few well-received and well-written questions, although the top question is a shameless request for opinions about competing libraries posted in 2015 which cannot be deleted because it serves as a dup-target. They post a lot of "which is better" opinion-based questions that get upvoted and fewer actual on-topic questions.

I try to uphold what I understand to be the guiding principle of Stack Overflow, where helping the asker is a worthwhile but ultimately secondary goal to building a long-lived resource for future users. To maintain quality, it is necessary to downvote and close questions that are low-quality using a simple criterion:

If someone else encountered a similar situation, would the contents of this question make it findable in a meaningful way, does it contain enough information for an average user with knowledge in its tags to understand the question, and is it written in a way that will attract answers of value?

My questions for Meta are (all related):

  1. Is my understanding of the Stack Overflow raison d'être still valid?

  2. These questions that are off-topic but protected by dup-target-links are like cysts in the tissue of Stack Overflow. They are not terribly damaging, but their usefulness will eventually decay, possibly into negative value territory. Is it worth putting any effort towards cleaning these up?

  3. Does this sound like I'm suffering from XKCD's "Somebody is wrong on the Internet" syndrome, so I should take a long break from Stack Overflow?

added 198 characters in body; edited tags
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Cody Gray Mod
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I've seen some weird stuff coming from high-rep users. I won't post identifying information to avoid metainvoking the Meta effect, but I'll try to sketch in broad terms what my concerns are.

In one case, a user with 110K+100K+ rep upvoted (and took credit for doing so in a comment) a junk question that was later closed as "unclear" with -11 votes. I actually flagged the comment for moderation because I was concerned that the user's account had been hacked. The flag was marked "helpful".

In another case, an 18K15K+ user posted a question you'd expect from a brand new user in their first high school programming course. This question got a -9 score and 4 close votes before the OPasker deleted it.

This user has quite a few well-received and well-written questions, although the top question is a shameless request for opinions about competing libraries posted in 2015 which cannot be deleted because it serves as a dup-target. They post a lot of "which is better" opinion-based questions that get upvoted and fewer actual on-topic questions.

I try to uphold what I understand to be the guiding principle of SOStack Overflow, where helping the OPasker is a worthwhile but ultimately secondary goal to beingbuilding a long-lived resource for FUTUREfuture users. To maintain quality, it is necessary to downvote and close questions that are low-quality using a simple criterion:

If someone else encountered a similar situation, would the contents of this question make it findable in a meaningful way, does it contain enough information for an average user with knowledge in its tags to understand the question, and is it written in a way that will attract answers of value.?

My Questionsquestions for SO-MetaMeta are (all related):

  1. Is my understanding of the SO raison d'êtreStack Overflow raison d'être still valid?

  2. These questionquestions that are off-topic but protected by dup-target-links are like cysts in the tissue of SOStack Overflow. They are not terribly damaging, but their usefulness will eventually decay, possibly into negative value territory. Is it worth putting any effort towards cleaning these up?

  3. Does this sound like I'm suffering from XKCD "Somebody is wrong on the Internet"XKCD's "Somebody is wrong on the Internet" syndrome, so I should take a long break from SOStack Overflow?

I've seen some weird stuff coming from high-rep users. I won't post identifying information to avoid meta effect.

In one case a user with 110K+ rep upvoted (and took credit in a comment) a junk question that was later closed as "unclear" with -11 votes. I actually flagged the comment for moderation because I was concerned that the user's account had been hacked. The flag was marked "helpful".

In another an 18K user posted a question you'd expect from a brand new user in their first high school programming course. This question got -9 score and 4 close votes before the OP deleted it.

This user has quite a few well-received and well-written questions, although the top question is a shameless request for opinions about competing libraries posted in 2015 which cannot be deleted because it serves as a dup-target. They post a lot of "which is better" opinion-based questions that get upvoted and fewer actual on-topic questions.

I try to uphold what I understand to be the guiding principle of SO, where helping the OP is a worthwhile but ultimately secondary goal to being a long-lived resource for FUTURE users. To maintain quality it is necessary to downvote and close questions that are low-quality using a simple criterion:

If someone else encountered a similar situation, would the contents of this question make it findable in a meaningful way, does it contain enough information for an average user with knowledge in its tags to understand the question, and is it written in a way that will attract answers of value.

My Questions for SO-Meta (all related):

  1. Is my understanding of the SO raison d'être still valid?

  2. These question that are off-topic but protected by dup-target-links are like cysts in the tissue of SO. They are not terribly damaging but their usefulness will eventually decay, possibly into negative value territory. Is it worth putting any effort towards cleaning these up?

  3. Does this sound like I'm suffering from XKCD "Somebody is wrong on the Internet" so I should take a long break from SO?

I've seen some weird stuff coming from high-rep users. I won't post identifying information to avoid invoking the Meta effect, but I'll try to sketch in broad terms what my concerns are.

In one case, a user with 100K+ rep upvoted (and took credit for doing so in a comment) a junk question that was later closed as "unclear" with -11 votes. I actually flagged the comment for moderation because I was concerned that the user's account had been hacked. The flag was marked "helpful".

In another case, an 15K+ user posted a question you'd expect from a brand new user in their first high school programming course. This question got a -9 score and 4 close votes before the asker deleted it.

This user has quite a few well-received and well-written questions, although the top question is a shameless request for opinions about competing libraries posted in 2015 which cannot be deleted because it serves as a dup-target. They post a lot of "which is better" opinion-based questions that get upvoted and fewer actual on-topic questions.

I try to uphold what I understand to be the guiding principle of Stack Overflow, where helping the asker is a worthwhile but ultimately secondary goal to building a long-lived resource for future users. To maintain quality, it is necessary to downvote and close questions that are low-quality using a simple criterion:

If someone else encountered a similar situation, would the contents of this question make it findable in a meaningful way, does it contain enough information for an average user with knowledge in its tags to understand the question, and is it written in a way that will attract answers of value?

My questions for Meta are (all related):

  1. Is my understanding of the Stack Overflow raison d'être still valid?

  2. These questions that are off-topic but protected by dup-target-links are like cysts in the tissue of Stack Overflow. They are not terribly damaging, but their usefulness will eventually decay, possibly into negative value territory. Is it worth putting any effort towards cleaning these up?

  3. Does this sound like I'm suffering from XKCD's "Somebody is wrong on the Internet" syndrome, so I should take a long break from Stack Overflow?

typos
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Melebius
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I've seen some weird stuff coming from high-rep users. I won't post identifying information to avoid meta effect.

In one case a user with 110K+ rep upvoted (and took credit in a comment) a junk question that was later closed as "unclear" with -11 votes. I actually flagged the comment for moderation because I was concerned that the user's account had been hacked. The flag was marked "helpful".

In another an 18K user posted a question you'd expect from a brand new user in their first high school programming course. This question got -9 score and 4 close votes before the OP deleted it.

This user has quite a few well-received and well-written questions, although the top question is a shameless request for opinions about competing libraries posted in 2015 which cannot be deleted because isit serves as a dup-target. They post a lot of "which is better" opinion-based questions that get upvoted and fewer actual on-topic questions.

I try to uphold what I understand to be the guiding principle of SO, where helping the OP is a worthwhile but ultimately secondary goal to being a long=livedlong-lived resource for FUTURE users. To maintain quality it is necessary to downvote and close questions that are low-quality using a simple criterion:

If someone else encountered a similar situation, would the contents of this question make it findable in a meaningful way, does it contain enough information for an average user with knowledge in its tags to understand the question, and is it written in a way that will attract answers of value.

My Questions for SO-Meta (all related):

  1. Is my understanding of the SO raison d'être still valid?

  2. These question that are off-topic but protected by dup-target-links are like cysts in the tissue of SO. They are not terribly damaging but their usefulness will eventually decay, possibly into negative value territory. Is it worth putting any effort towards cleaning these up?

  3. Does this sound like I'm suffering from XKCD "Somebody is wrong on the Internet" so I should take a long break from SO?

I've seen some weird stuff coming from high-rep users. I won't post identifying information to avoid meta effect.

In one case a user with 110K+ rep upvoted (and took credit in a comment) a junk question that was later closed as "unclear" with -11 votes. I actually flagged the comment for moderation because I was concerned that the user's account had been hacked. The flag was marked "helpful".

In another an 18K user posted a question you'd expect from a brand new user in their first high school programming course. This question got -9 score and 4 close votes before the OP deleted it.

This user has quite a few well-received and well-written questions, although the top question is a shameless request for opinions about competing libraries posted in 2015 which cannot be deleted because is serves as a dup-target. They post a lot of "which is better" opinion-based questions that get upvoted and fewer actual on-topic questions.

I try to uphold what I understand to be the guiding principle of SO, where helping the OP is a worthwhile but ultimately secondary goal to being a long=lived resource for FUTURE users. To maintain quality it is necessary to downvote and close questions that are low-quality using a simple criterion:

If someone else encountered a similar situation, would the contents of this question make it findable in a meaningful way, does it contain enough information for an average user with knowledge in its tags to understand the question, and is it written in a way that will attract answers of value.

My Questions for SO-Meta (all related):

  1. Is my understanding of the SO raison d'être still valid?

  2. These question that are off-topic but protected by dup-target-links are like cysts in the tissue of SO. They are not terribly damaging but their usefulness will eventually decay, possibly into negative value territory. Is it worth putting any effort towards cleaning these up?

  3. Does this sound like I'm suffering from XKCD "Somebody is wrong on the Internet" so I should take a long break from SO?

I've seen some weird stuff coming from high-rep users. I won't post identifying information to avoid meta effect.

In one case a user with 110K+ rep upvoted (and took credit in a comment) a junk question that was later closed as "unclear" with -11 votes. I actually flagged the comment for moderation because I was concerned that the user's account had been hacked. The flag was marked "helpful".

In another an 18K user posted a question you'd expect from a brand new user in their first high school programming course. This question got -9 score and 4 close votes before the OP deleted it.

This user has quite a few well-received and well-written questions, although the top question is a shameless request for opinions about competing libraries posted in 2015 which cannot be deleted because it serves as a dup-target. They post a lot of "which is better" opinion-based questions that get upvoted and fewer actual on-topic questions.

I try to uphold what I understand to be the guiding principle of SO, where helping the OP is a worthwhile but ultimately secondary goal to being a long-lived resource for FUTURE users. To maintain quality it is necessary to downvote and close questions that are low-quality using a simple criterion:

If someone else encountered a similar situation, would the contents of this question make it findable in a meaningful way, does it contain enough information for an average user with knowledge in its tags to understand the question, and is it written in a way that will attract answers of value.

My Questions for SO-Meta (all related):

  1. Is my understanding of the SO raison d'être still valid?

  2. These question that are off-topic but protected by dup-target-links are like cysts in the tissue of SO. They are not terribly damaging but their usefulness will eventually decay, possibly into negative value territory. Is it worth putting any effort towards cleaning these up?

  3. Does this sound like I'm suffering from XKCD "Somebody is wrong on the Internet" so I should take a long break from SO?

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jscs
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Jim Garrison
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