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Feb 27, 2019 at 22:31 history edited Cody GrayMod CC BY-SA 4.0
Clarify and improve grammar. Also incorporate tweak suggested by myself in the comments. Please feel free to revert if you strongly disagree.
Feb 26, 2019 at 22:09 comment added Lundin @CrisLuengo There's barely anyone getting high rep from such tags so I actually doubt it.
Feb 26, 2019 at 21:43 comment added Cris Luengo @Lundin: You follow the C and C++ tags. Try following a small tag for a while. I've been here a little over a year, and have seen several cases like this (including one extreme case, a user posting several terrible questions a week, for two months in a row, and complaining on Meta about the poor reception he was getting).
Feb 26, 2019 at 21:39 comment added Lundin @CrisLuengo Given that I have barely ever seen the phenomenon described in 8 years as a member... then yes, wishful and realistic thinking, as it must be very rare.
Feb 26, 2019 at 21:19 comment added Cody Gray Mod There’s a good question hidden in here, and it’s the one that came out in comments: is this something you as a moderator should take action on, or something you should leave entirely to the community to handle? Asking about the specific message you’d send them isn’t a great question. There’s a standard message template for consistently low-quality contributions, so that’d be any moderators’ standard go-to choice, unless there was a compelling reason to take extreme action, and that’s not assumed in this scenario.
Feb 26, 2019 at 17:49 comment added Adriaan @PM77-1 same userID for certain; we (and even mods can't) determine the other. Not necessarily an account take over though. Tool-rec and overly broad 'how to git' questions gained massive voted back in 2010. Same user asking similar questions now just has not adjusted to the tightened scope of SO.
Feb 26, 2019 at 17:48 comment added PM 77-1 Are you saying that they are actually the same Users coming back or just same User IDs? What you describe smells like an account take-over.
Feb 26, 2019 at 17:10 comment added Joe W Sounds like an issue for the community, not moderators
Feb 26, 2019 at 15:56 comment added Cris Luengo @Lundin: LOL! Wishful thinking. No, some of these people are very stubborn and very unwilling to improve. Seen it first hand. And they've got so much rep that they can put a bounty on all their questions, making it impossible to close them for another week. If you live in smaller tags it sometimes takes a while to close a bad question, long enough to allow a bounty to be placed.
Feb 26, 2019 at 14:58 comment added Ander Biguri @Lundin I have personally seen this with the user not falling in line.
Feb 26, 2019 at 13:15 comment added alpereira7 They are like "made guys", other users don't dare criticize them.
Feb 26, 2019 at 9:33 comment added Michael Dodd I've seen this happen within the past few months, an 8k user (most of that rep attained from questions asked c. 2010) returns after a 6 year hiatus and asks a series of very poorly-worded and poorly-formatted questions, the sort of thing that would get a new user question-banned very quickly. But because of those historic questions that ban will never come.
Feb 26, 2019 at 8:57 comment added Lundin I don't get why moderators need to be involved in this, the community is perfectly able to handle it on its own. After getting down voted/close voted frequently enough, the user will fall in line.
Feb 26, 2019 at 7:08 history edited Adriaan CC BY-SA 4.0
added 12 characters in body
Feb 26, 2019 at 6:36 history edited Adriaan CC BY-SA 4.0
added 266 characters in body
Feb 26, 2019 at 6:34 comment added Adriaan @TylerH I indeed meant what E_net4 has said: questions which would be closed. I have seen this happen with several >10k users who got their rep from 8, 9 yo Qs, and now ask questions which are broad/don't have an MCVE/are POB etc. Why they ask these I have no idea, but closing them doesn't help them to improve their question standard, and since the question ban won't kick in, there's no way to get them to improve from a normal user's side. Hence the question
Feb 26, 2019 at 6:26 history edited Adriaan CC BY-SA 4.0
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Feb 26, 2019 at 1:38 comment added Andy Hayden This can happen through random chance, a user posts a question which happens to become incredibly popular +1000s. Reputation doesn't always imply ability to ask high quality questions nor a deep understanding of how the site works.
Feb 25, 2019 at 22:04 comment added E_net4 @TylerH It is known that some people uphold higher expectations from established users, so the phrasing here doesn't seem surprising to me. That is a fair distinction nonetheless.
Feb 25, 2019 at 22:00 comment added TylerH @E_net4 OK, well Adriaan didn't say "poor" questions. He said "mediocre". A mediocre question should have no problems... but should not be particularly interesting or remarkably well-researched, either. Again, clarification on that is needed, because there's no inherent problem with mediocre questions. Even if he meant "poor", instead, clarification is still needed. What about it is poor? The effort by the OP? The spelling and grammar? Or something worse like the lack of an MCVE or the fact that it's POB/Too Broad/a dupe?
Feb 25, 2019 at 21:57 comment added E_net4 @TylerH The alleged problem emerges when that user can continue asking poor questions, whereas a newer user would have been question banned. It can be perceived as having double standards in favor of users who have collected a lot of reputation over time, usually in the days when the bar of quality was indeed lower.
Feb 25, 2019 at 21:45 comment added TylerH Can you clarify what you mean by mediocre questions here? AFAIK there's no problem with 'mediocre' questions... what matters is whether they're on-topic. Why would a moderator need to do anything here? Not all questions can be great.
Feb 25, 2019 at 20:38 history answered Adriaan CC BY-SA 4.0