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Active reading. [<http://stackoverflow.com/legal/trademark-guidance> (the last section)].
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Peter Mortensen
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Speaking as someone who's been pretty active on the site for about 5 years, I don't get all the moaning and groaning.

I mean, maybe it's because I'm primarily a JavaScript/Python developer, two languages marketed towards beginners (for better or worse) and thus the tags I frequent always have been and always will be full of garbage questions and garbage answers. So I don't really see things getting markedly worse from being nicer to new people (I'm unconvinced that they could).

And, mea culpa, since the push I've....been nicer to new people. Not that I didn't down-vote, vote-to-close, comment, etc....just...without the sarcasm.

And although I've already voiced the sentiment elsewhere here on meta, I don't understand why the tradeoff is always framed as binary, as if it's pristine-but-sparsely-populated-bastion-of-perfection on one hand and an anything-goes-garbage-dump on the other. Codes of conduct get a bad rap, and sometimes deservedly so, but is this the hill to you all really want to die on?

I mean, I'm on the site almost everyday, and have been for years. But you know what? If all the naysayers are right and this ruins SO, well, my life won't be over.

This is an existential crisis, a battle for the meaning of StackOverflowStack Overflow. But does it need to be? Is your daily interaction with the site profoundly changed? For the worse?

Speaking as someone who's been pretty active on the site for about 5 years, I don't get all the moaning and groaning.

I mean, maybe it's because I'm primarily a JavaScript/Python developer, two languages marketed towards beginners (for better or worse) and thus the tags I frequent always have been and always will be full of garbage questions and garbage answers. So I don't really see things getting markedly worse from being nicer to new people (I'm unconvinced that they could).

And, mea culpa, since the push I've....been nicer to new people. Not that I didn't down-vote, vote-to-close, comment, etc....just...without the sarcasm.

And although I've already voiced the sentiment elsewhere here on meta, I don't understand why the tradeoff is always framed as binary, as if it's pristine-but-sparsely-populated-bastion-of-perfection on one hand and an anything-goes-garbage-dump on the other. Codes of conduct get a bad rap, and sometimes deservedly so, but is this the hill to you all really want to die on?

I mean, I'm on the site almost everyday, and have been for years. But you know what? If all the naysayers are right and this ruins SO, well, my life won't be over.

This is an existential crisis, a battle for the meaning of StackOverflow. But does it need to be? Is your daily interaction with the site profoundly changed? For the worse?

Speaking as someone who's been pretty active on the site for about 5 years, I don't get all the moaning and groaning.

I mean, maybe it's because I'm primarily a JavaScript/Python developer, two languages marketed towards beginners (for better or worse) and thus the tags I frequent always have been and always will be full of garbage questions and garbage answers. So I don't really see things getting markedly worse from being nicer to new people (I'm unconvinced that they could).

And, mea culpa, since the push I've....been nicer to new people. Not that I didn't down-vote, vote-to-close, comment, etc....just...without the sarcasm.

And although I've already voiced the sentiment elsewhere here on meta, I don't understand why the tradeoff is always framed as binary, as if it's pristine-but-sparsely-populated-bastion-of-perfection on one hand and an anything-goes-garbage-dump on the other. Codes of conduct get a bad rap, and sometimes deservedly so, but is this the hill to you all really want to die on?

I mean, I'm on the site almost everyday, and have been for years. But you know what? If all the naysayers are right and this ruins SO, well, my life won't be over.

This is an existential crisis, a battle for the meaning of Stack Overflow. But does it need to be? Is your daily interaction with the site profoundly changed? For the worse?

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Jared Smith
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Speaking as someone who's been pretty active on the site for about 5 years, I don't get all the moaning and groaning.

I mean, maybe it's because I'm primarily a JavaScript/Python developer, two languages marketed towards beginners (for better or worse) and thus the tags I frequent always have been and always will be full of garbage questions and garbage answers. So I don't really see things getting markedly worse from being nicer to new people (I'm unconvinced that they could).

And, mea culpa, since the push I've....been nicer to new people. Not that I didn't down-vote, vote-to-close, comment, etc....just...without the sarcasm.

And although I've already voiced the sentiment elsewhere here on meta, I don't understand why the tradeoff is always framed as binary, as if it's pristine-but-sparsely-populated-bastion-of-perfection on one hand and an anything-goes-garbage-dump on the other. Codes of conduct get a bad rap, and sometimes deservedly so, but is this the hill to you all really want to die on?

I mean, I'm on the site almost everyday, and have been for years. But you know what? If all the naysayers are right and this ruins SO, well, my life won't be over.

This is an existential crisis, a battle for the meaning of StackOverflow. But does it need to be? Is your daily interaction with the site profoundly changed? For the worse?