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Let's take this in parts.

This was a user with 95 reputation. Although the question had obvious problems, OP was engaging with people in the comments and responding to requests.

Good! This is what users should be doing. They've made a good faith effort to ask the best question they can, but they've run into problems somewhere. People asking for clarification can then help the asker provide additional information in a very timely manner. Sticking around after asking shows good investment.

Nevertheless, within 9 minutes, the question went to -4 and was put on hold. The nature of the question was obvious and it could have been edited to work. But because of the rapid negative feedback, the user deleted the question.

Yeah, because votes happen on the post as it stands. Not how it might be, not how it could be, but how it is. There's never any guarantee that a question will get better, nor do we expect anyone but the asker to actually fix it. When voting, you vote on the post alone. Not the comments, not the related posts, just what you see in the post section. I don't know why the poster deleted it, and neither do you.

The new Code of Conduct, at least in spirit, is about more than just nasty comments.

Not really. It just means we should be commenting less. But curation, like downvotes and closing, should still happen. With less comments, the (un?)intended side effect is it happens more often, and quicker.

The problem isn't the necessary curation that goes on, it's the unnecessarily fast rate at which it happens.

 

So if you're going to engage in what you consider "quality control", at least think before you act. Take the time to read the comments and see if OP is trying to address the problems. If you see OP responding to comments, back off.

No. Vote on the post as it stands. Nothing else matters.

And even if you don't, count to 10.

I only have so much time, and this post wants to waste more of it? Nah.

Let's be clear. I do not object to downvotes and close votes; in fact, I use them all the time. I do object to inexperienced users being thrown into a buzz-saw.

User experience is irrelevant. All that matters is post quality. Curation isn't a buzzsaw; it's curation. When building a castle, if a contractor provides substandard materials, you don't use them so you don't hurt their feelings. You reject it because it doesn't meet the quality standards. Using it just means the castle will eventually fall down, and now you hope there's nobody under the part that just broke.


We're not here to help every asker. We're here to build a lasting repository of high quality knowledge, that helps readers far into the future. Curation is an integral part of that process. Rejecting low quality now saves untold amounts of time in the future.

Let's take this in parts.

This was a user with 95 reputation. Although the question had obvious problems, OP was engaging with people in the comments and responding to requests.

Good! This is what users should be doing. They've made a good faith effort to ask the best question they can, but they've run into problems somewhere. People asking for clarification can then help the asker provide additional information in a very timely manner. Sticking around after asking shows good investment.

Nevertheless, within 9 minutes, the question went to -4 and was put on hold. The nature of the question was obvious and it could have been edited to work. But because of the rapid negative feedback, the user deleted the question.

Yeah, because votes happen on the post as it stands. Not how it might be, not how it could be, but how it is. There's never any guarantee that a question will get better, nor do we expect anyone but the asker to actually fix it. When voting, you vote on the post alone. Not the comments, not the related posts, just what you see in the post section. I don't know why the poster deleted it, and neither do you.

The new Code of Conduct, at least in spirit, is about more than just nasty comments.

Not really. It just means we should be commenting less. But curation, like downvotes and closing, should still happen. With less comments, the (un?)intended side effect is it happens more often, and quicker.

The problem isn't the necessary curation that goes on, it's the unnecessarily fast rate at which it happens.

 

So if you're going to engage in what you consider "quality control", at least think before you act. Take the time to read the comments and see if OP is trying to address the problems. If you see OP responding to comments, back off.

No. Vote on the post as it stands. Nothing else matters.

And even if you don't, count to 10.

I only have so much time, and this post wants to waste more of it? Nah.

Let's be clear. I do not object to downvotes and close votes; in fact, I use them all the time. I do object to inexperienced users being thrown into a buzz-saw.

User experience is irrelevant. All that matters is post quality. Curation isn't a buzzsaw; it's curation. When building a castle, if a contractor provides substandard materials, you don't use them so you don't hurt their feelings. You reject it because it doesn't meet the quality standards. Using it just means the castle will eventually fall down, and now you hope there's nobody under the part that just broke.


We're not here to help every asker. We're here to build a lasting repository of high quality knowledge, that helps readers far into the future. Curation is an integral part of that process. Rejecting low quality now saves untold amounts of time in the future.

Let's take this in parts.

This was a user with 95 reputation. Although the question had obvious problems, OP was engaging with people in the comments and responding to requests.

Good! This is what users should be doing. They've made a good faith effort to ask the best question they can, but they've run into problems somewhere. People asking for clarification can then help the asker provide additional information in a very timely manner. Sticking around after asking shows good investment.

Nevertheless, within 9 minutes, the question went to -4 and was put on hold. The nature of the question was obvious and it could have been edited to work. But because of the rapid negative feedback, the user deleted the question.

Yeah, because votes happen on the post as it stands. Not how it might be, not how it could be, but how it is. There's never any guarantee that a question will get better, nor do we expect anyone but the asker to actually fix it. When voting, you vote on the post alone. Not the comments, not the related posts, just what you see in the post section. I don't know why the poster deleted it, and neither do you.

The new Code of Conduct, at least in spirit, is about more than just nasty comments.

Not really. It just means we should be commenting less. But curation, like downvotes and closing, should still happen. With less comments, the (un?)intended side effect is it happens more often, and quicker.

The problem isn't the necessary curation that goes on, it's the unnecessarily fast rate at which it happens.

So if you're going to engage in what you consider "quality control", at least think before you act. Take the time to read the comments and see if OP is trying to address the problems. If you see OP responding to comments, back off.

No. Vote on the post as it stands. Nothing else matters.

And even if you don't, count to 10.

I only have so much time, and this post wants to waste more of it? Nah.

Let's be clear. I do not object to downvotes and close votes; in fact, I use them all the time. I do object to inexperienced users being thrown into a buzz-saw.

User experience is irrelevant. All that matters is post quality. Curation isn't a buzzsaw; it's curation. When building a castle, if a contractor provides substandard materials, you don't use them so you don't hurt their feelings. You reject it because it doesn't meet the quality standards. Using it just means the castle will eventually fall down, and now you hope there's nobody under the part that just broke.


We're not here to help every asker. We're here to build a lasting repository of high quality knowledge, that helps readers far into the future. Curation is an integral part of that process. Rejecting low quality now saves untold amounts of time in the future.

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Let's take this in parts.

This was a user with 95 reputation. Although the question had obvious problems, OP was engaging with people in the comments and responding to requests.

Good! This is what users should be doing. They've made a good faith effort to ask the best question they can, but they've run into problems somewhere. People asking for clarification can then help the asker provide additional information in a very timely manner. Sticking around after asking shows good investment.

Nevertheless, within 9 minutes, the question went to -4 and was put on hold. The nature of the question was obvious and it could have been edited to work. But because of the rapid negative feedback, the user deleted the question.

Yeah, because votes happen on the post as it stands. Not how it might be, not how it could be, but how it is. There's never any guarantee that a question will get better, nor do we expect anyone but the asker to actually fix it. When voting, you vote on the post alone. Not the comments, not the related posts, just what you see in the post section. I don't know why the poster deleted it, and neither do you.

The new Code of Conduct, at least in spirit, is about more than just nasty comments.

Not really. It just means we should be commenting less. But curation, like downvotes and closing, should still happen. With less comments, the (un?)intended side effect is it happens more often, and quicker.

The problem isn't the necessary curation that goes on, it's the unnecessarily fast rate at which it happens.

So if you're going to engage in what you consider "quality control", at least think before you act. Take the time to read the comments and see if OP is trying to address the problems. If you see OP responding to comments, back off.

No. Vote on the post as it stands. Nothing else matters.

And even if you don't, count to 10.

I only have so much time, and this post wants to waste more of it? Nah.

Let's be clear. I do not object to downvotes and close votes; in fact, I use them all the time. I do object to inexperienced users being thrown into a buzz-saw.

User experience is irrelevant. All that matters is post quality. Curation isn't a buzzsaw; it's curation. When building a castle, if a contractor provides substandard materials, you don't use them so you don't hurt their feelings. You reject it because it doesn't meet the quality standards. Using it just means the castle will eventually fall down, and now you hope there's nobody under the part that just broke.


We're not here to help every asker. We're here to build a lasting repository of high quality knowledge, that helps readers far into the future. Curation is an integral part of that process. Rejecting low quality now saves untold amounts of time in the future.