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According to https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/281787/it-s-time-to-retire-the-term-rep-whore that term is not allowed to be used to describe a group of people anymore. Not to detract from this answer (which is good)
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Magisch
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Now about identifying and concentrating on the core problems instead of their (highly visible) effects?

The core reason for all the negativity on SO have already been identified as a conflict between groups of users with different interests.

So, the next logical thing to do here is to identify which of these interests are in line with SO's goals and support these while denying support to interests that conflict with the site's goals.

Since forcefully coercing a mass of users that is constantly changing into compliance is an experience in Whac-a-Mole, a sustainable way to go is "softly but firmly" nudge them into the right way of action by making it easy and away from a wrong one by making it hard.

The following is a sample outline, by those user groups, what specific objectives and measures could be used like this (this doesn't constitue a concrete suggestion, just examples of the initialives that already surfaced in the past, sometimes repeatedly):

  • caretakers

    • make it easy (aka fast) to point out common flaws in questions and help fix them
    • make it easy to quickly triage question as suitable/unsuitable quality
    • make it easy to locate and manage duplicates
      • a panel? allow multiple suggestions? better search (currently gives less relevant results than Google)?
      • mechanic to change the suggested/marked duplicate after edit?
  • askers

    • make it easy to ask good-quality questions, make it hard to ask bad-quality ones
      • wizard/template with entries for all the information required (including own research and efforts and MCVE); make them go through all the steps and compose something on each on the assumption that one-stoppers will go away as it's "too much work"
  • rep whoresusers primarily motivated by reputation

    • incentivise finding duplicates
      • award some reputation to the finder? more is the OP confirms it solves their problem?
    • disincentivise answering duplicates
      • take away all or a part of the reputation gained from this?
    • disincentivise giving poor quality answers?
      • make donvoting less taxing? make these answers officially deletion-worthy?

Now about identifying and concentrating on the core problems instead of their (highly visible) effects?

The core reason for all the negativity on SO have already been identified as a conflict between groups of users with different interests.

So, the next logical thing to do here is to identify which of these interests are in line with SO's goals and support these while denying support to interests that conflict with the site's goals.

Since forcefully coercing a mass of users that is constantly changing into compliance is an experience in Whac-a-Mole, a sustainable way to go is "softly but firmly" nudge them into the right way of action by making it easy and away from a wrong one by making it hard.

The following is a sample outline, by those user groups, what specific objectives and measures could be used like this (this doesn't constitue a concrete suggestion, just examples of the initialives that already surfaced in the past, sometimes repeatedly):

  • caretakers

    • make it easy (aka fast) to point out common flaws in questions and help fix them
    • make it easy to quickly triage question as suitable/unsuitable quality
    • make it easy to locate and manage duplicates
      • a panel? allow multiple suggestions? better search (currently gives less relevant results than Google)?
      • mechanic to change the suggested/marked duplicate after edit?
  • askers

    • make it easy to ask good-quality questions, make it hard to ask bad-quality ones
      • wizard/template with entries for all the information required (including own research and efforts and MCVE); make them go through all the steps and compose something on each on the assumption that one-stoppers will go away as it's "too much work"
  • rep whores

    • incentivise finding duplicates
      • award some reputation to the finder? more is the OP confirms it solves their problem?
    • disincentivise answering duplicates
      • take away all or a part of the reputation gained from this?
    • disincentivise giving poor quality answers?
      • make donvoting less taxing? make these answers officially deletion-worthy?

Now about identifying and concentrating on the core problems instead of their (highly visible) effects?

The core reason for all the negativity on SO have already been identified as a conflict between groups of users with different interests.

So, the next logical thing to do here is to identify which of these interests are in line with SO's goals and support these while denying support to interests that conflict with the site's goals.

Since forcefully coercing a mass of users that is constantly changing into compliance is an experience in Whac-a-Mole, a sustainable way to go is "softly but firmly" nudge them into the right way of action by making it easy and away from a wrong one by making it hard.

The following is a sample outline, by those user groups, what specific objectives and measures could be used like this (this doesn't constitue a concrete suggestion, just examples of the initialives that already surfaced in the past, sometimes repeatedly):

  • caretakers

    • make it easy (aka fast) to point out common flaws in questions and help fix them
    • make it easy to quickly triage question as suitable/unsuitable quality
    • make it easy to locate and manage duplicates
      • a panel? allow multiple suggestions? better search (currently gives less relevant results than Google)?
      • mechanic to change the suggested/marked duplicate after edit?
  • askers

    • make it easy to ask good-quality questions, make it hard to ask bad-quality ones
      • wizard/template with entries for all the information required (including own research and efforts and MCVE); make them go through all the steps and compose something on each on the assumption that one-stoppers will go away as it's "too much work"
  • users primarily motivated by reputation

    • incentivise finding duplicates
      • award some reputation to the finder? more is the OP confirms it solves their problem?
    • disincentivise answering duplicates
      • take away all or a part of the reputation gained from this?
    • disincentivise giving poor quality answers?
      • make donvoting less taxing? make these answers officially deletion-worthy?
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ivan_pozdeev
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Now about identifying and concentrating on the core problems instead of their (highly visible) effects?

The core reason for all the negativity on SO have already been identified as a conflict between groups of users with different interests.

So, the next logical thing to do here is to identify which of these interests are in line with SO's goals and support these while denying support to interests that conflict with the site's goals.

Since forcefully coercing a mass of users that is constantly changing into compliance is an experience in Whac-a-Mole, a sustainable way to go is "softly but firmly" nudge them into the right way of action by making it easy and away from a wrong one by making it hard.

The following is a sample outline, by those user groups, what specific objectives and measures could be used like this (this doesn't constitue a concrete suggestion, just examples of the initialives that already surfaced in the past, sometimes repeatedly):

  • caretakers

    • make it easy (aka fast) to point out common flaws in questions and help fix them
    • make it easy to quickly triage question as suitable/unsuitable quality
    • make it easy to locate and manage duplicates
      • a panel? allow multiple suggestions? better search (currently gives less relevant results than Google)?
      • mechanic to change the suggested/marked duplicate after edit?
  • askers

    • make it easy to ask good-quality questions, make it hard to ask bad-quality ones
      • wizard/template with entries for all the information required (including own research and efforts and MCVE); make them go through all the steps and compose something on each on the assumption that one-stoppers will go away as it's "too much work"
  • rep whores

    • incentivise finding duplicates
      • award some reputation to the finder? more is the OP confirms it solves their problem?
    • disincentivise answering duplicates
      • take away all or a part of the reputation gained from this?
    • disincentivise giving poor quality answers?
      • make donvoting less taxing? make these answers officially deletion-worthy?