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gnat
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improved tag markup, beautified given link, fixed typo
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honk
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Before this is marked as a duplicate, hear me out. I've seen this issue a few times for questions tagged [google-home] or [actions-on-google], with https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46941546/where-are-google-assistant-applicationsthis question (screenshot) being the most reccentrecent.

Many of these questions get closed "Unclear what you are asking" by people who aren't familiar with the topic. The five people who voted to close in this case don't seem to have any understanding of coding or releasing apps for the Google Home - and, to be fair to them, I can see how they could see the question as unclear.

To those of us who do - the question was perfectly clear (although I edited it to be even clearer, I hope). It could, arguably, not have been in the scope of SO, but I would argue that it is - making the results of coding available for others and discoverable seems relevant, particularly since this is done using one of the developer tools that is essential for developing the app in the first place. The design and development of a voice app is deeply integrated into the discoverability of it, and documentation for voice app development cover all these issues side-by-side.

Is it reasonable to ask moderators to pause a little before passing judgement on topics they're not familiar with? Is it possible to bias people away from moderating topics they're not familiar with? I wouldn't want to prevent people from moderating cross-topic, but there are cases where aggressive moderation isn't as helpful.

(Secondarily - I wouldn't mind some other votes to re-open the question. It is a reasonable question, and there are some potential answers that are broadly useful to the community.)

Before this is marked as a duplicate, hear me out. I've seen this issue a few times for questions tagged [google-home] or [actions-on-google], with https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46941546/where-are-google-assistant-applications (screenshot) being the most reccent.

Many of these questions get closed "Unclear what you are asking" by people who aren't familiar with the topic. The five people who voted to close in this case don't seem to have any understanding of coding or releasing apps for the Google Home - and, to be fair to them, I can see how they could see the question as unclear.

To those of us who do - the question was perfectly clear (although I edited it to be even clearer, I hope). It could, arguably, not have been in the scope of SO, but I would argue that it is - making the results of coding available for others and discoverable seems relevant, particularly since this is done using one of the developer tools that is essential for developing the app in the first place. The design and development of a voice app is deeply integrated into the discoverability of it, and documentation for voice app development cover all these issues side-by-side.

Is it reasonable to ask moderators to pause a little before passing judgement on topics they're not familiar with? Is it possible to bias people away from moderating topics they're not familiar with? I wouldn't want to prevent people from moderating cross-topic, but there are cases where aggressive moderation isn't as helpful.

(Secondarily - I wouldn't mind some other votes to re-open the question. It is a reasonable question, and there are some potential answers that are broadly useful to the community.)

Before this is marked as a duplicate, hear me out. I've seen this issue a few times for questions tagged or , with this question (screenshot) being the most recent.

Many of these questions get closed "Unclear what you are asking" by people who aren't familiar with the topic. The five people who voted to close in this case don't seem to have any understanding of coding or releasing apps for the Google Home - and, to be fair to them, I can see how they could see the question as unclear.

To those of us who do - the question was perfectly clear (although I edited it to be even clearer, I hope). It could, arguably, not have been in the scope of SO, but I would argue that it is - making the results of coding available for others and discoverable seems relevant, particularly since this is done using one of the developer tools that is essential for developing the app in the first place. The design and development of a voice app is deeply integrated into the discoverability of it, and documentation for voice app development cover all these issues side-by-side.

Is it reasonable to ask moderators to pause a little before passing judgement on topics they're not familiar with? Is it possible to bias people away from moderating topics they're not familiar with? I wouldn't want to prevent people from moderating cross-topic, but there are cases where aggressive moderation isn't as helpful.

(Secondarily - I wouldn't mind some other votes to re-open the question. It is a reasonable question, and there are some potential answers that are broadly useful to the community.)

edited body; edited title
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jscs
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Overzealous moderation Should users unfamiliar with a topic wait before voting to close?

Before this is marked as a duplicate, hear me out. I've seen this issue a few times for questions tagged google-home[google-home] or actions-on-google[actions-on-google], with https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46941546/where-are-google-assistant-applications (screenshot) being the most reccent.

Many of these questions get closed "Unclear what you are asking" by people who aren't familiar with the topic. The five people who voted to close in this case don't seem to have any understanding of coding or releasing apps for the Google Home - and, to be fair to them, I can see how they could see the question as unclear.

To those of us who do - the question was perfectly clear (although I edited it to be even clearer, I hope). It could, arguably, not have been in the scope of SO, but I would argue that it is - making the results of coding available for others and discoverable seems relevant, particularly since this is done using one of the developer tools that is essential for developing the app in the first place. The design and development of a voice app is deeply integrated into the discoverability of it, and documentation for voice app development cover all these issues side-by-side.

Is it reasonable to ask moderators to pause a little before passing judgement on topics they're not familiar with? Is it possible to bias people away from moderating topics they're not familiar with? I wouldn't want to prevent people from moderating cross-topic, but there are cases where aggressive moderation isn't as helpful.

(Secondarily - I wouldn't mind some other votes to re-open the question. It is a reasonable question, and there are some potential answers that are broadly useful to the community.)

Overzealous moderation?

Before this is marked as a duplicate, hear me out. I've seen this issue a few times for questions tagged google-home or actions-on-google, with https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46941546/where-are-google-assistant-applications being the most reccent.

Many of these questions get closed "Unclear what you are asking" by people who aren't familiar with the topic. The five people who voted to close in this case don't seem to have any understanding of coding or releasing apps for the Google Home - and, to be fair to them, I can see how they could see the question as unclear.

To those of us who do - the question was perfectly clear (although I edited it to be even clearer, I hope). It could, arguably, not have been in the scope of SO, but I would argue that it is - making the results of coding available for others and discoverable seems relevant, particularly since this is done using one of the developer tools that is essential for developing the app in the first place. The design and development of a voice app is deeply integrated into the discoverability of it, and documentation for voice app development cover all these issues side-by-side.

Is it reasonable to ask moderators to pause a little before passing judgement on topics they're not familiar with? Is it possible to bias people away from moderating topics they're not familiar with? I wouldn't want to prevent people from moderating cross-topic, but there are cases where aggressive moderation isn't as helpful.

(Secondarily - I wouldn't mind some other votes to re-open the question. It is a reasonable question, and there are some potential answers that are broadly useful to the community.)

Should users unfamiliar with a topic wait before voting to close?

Before this is marked as a duplicate, hear me out. I've seen this issue a few times for questions tagged [google-home] or [actions-on-google], with https://stackoverflow.com/questions/46941546/where-are-google-assistant-applications (screenshot) being the most reccent.

Many of these questions get closed "Unclear what you are asking" by people who aren't familiar with the topic. The five people who voted to close in this case don't seem to have any understanding of coding or releasing apps for the Google Home - and, to be fair to them, I can see how they could see the question as unclear.

To those of us who do - the question was perfectly clear (although I edited it to be even clearer, I hope). It could, arguably, not have been in the scope of SO, but I would argue that it is - making the results of coding available for others and discoverable seems relevant, particularly since this is done using one of the developer tools that is essential for developing the app in the first place. The design and development of a voice app is deeply integrated into the discoverability of it, and documentation for voice app development cover all these issues side-by-side.

Is it reasonable to ask moderators to pause a little before passing judgement on topics they're not familiar with? Is it possible to bias people away from moderating topics they're not familiar with? I wouldn't want to prevent people from moderating cross-topic, but there are cases where aggressive moderation isn't as helpful.

(Secondarily - I wouldn't mind some other votes to re-open the question. It is a reasonable question, and there are some potential answers that are broadly useful to the community.)

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Prisoner
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