Skip to main content
deleted 211 characters in body
Source Link
Sebastian Simon
  • 19.4k
  • 5
  • 23
  • 28

So, are almost 60% of deleted questions and less than 20% of questions actually engaging in valuable discussion enough to disable this feature again? If not, what are the thresholds? In terms of the ratio of misuse over total use, this seems to be happening very frequently; or are we waiting for the feature to be used improperly a specific number of times over a specific period of time?

If there’s someone who can search for deleted posts, maybe more data can be provided. Shog9’s answer says “If [users misusing this feature] happens with too much frequency, we’re just going to have to turn this off again; […] If we don’t hold up our end of the bargain, this has to go back off”. In terms of quantity, I would say it is happening with “too much frequency”, currently.

So, are almost 60% of deleted questions and less than 20% of questions actually engaging in valuable discussion enough to disable this feature again? If not, what are the thresholds? If there’s someone who can search for deleted posts, maybe more data can be provided. Shog9’s answer says “If [users misusing this feature] happens with too much frequency, we’re just going to have to turn this off again; […] If we don’t hold up our end of the bargain, this has to go back off”. In terms of quantity, I would say it is happening with “too much frequency”, currently.

So, are almost 60% of deleted questions and less than 20% of questions actually engaging in valuable discussion enough to disable this feature again? If not, what are the thresholds? In terms of the ratio of misuse over total use, this seems to be happening very frequently; or are we waiting for the feature to be used improperly a specific number of times over a specific period of time?

If there’s someone who can search for deleted posts, maybe more data can be provided.

Source Link
Sebastian Simon
  • 19.4k
  • 5
  • 23
  • 28

Over the last few months I’ve been collecting some data: finding questions that don’t use this feature properly and taking screenshots of them. I was specifically looking for this feature being misused, i.e. either OPs asking nothing after the default “I have a question about my Stack Overflow post ⟨link⟩”, or basically reposting the original question.

Since I cannot search deleted posts, my data set on misused questions is not complete, and since the default phrase can be edited, searching "I have a question about my Stack Overflow post" may also not produce a complete list of non-deleted questions.

Having said that, with the available data, I’m presenting some statistics on questions that aren’t deleted and don’t misuse the feature, as well as questions that are deleted and clearly misuse the feature.

Non-deleted questions not misusing the feature

Using the search above, there are currently 25 non-deleted questions containing that phrase. Of those, only 12 are well-received (score > 0). The average score is −6.28.

Deleted questions misusing the feature

This is a list of links to such questions, their IDs, and screenshots. That’s 37 questions.


Here’s all these statistics in a pie-chart:

19.35% well-received, 20.97% non-deleted, not well-received, 59.68% deleted

Looks pretty bad.

Most of the negatively scored questions complain about downvotes or lack of attention. 17 of the 25 OPs of the non-deleted questions have already reached the privilege to ask on Meta, usually very soon after asking, but of course, this isn’t accounting for the Meta effect.

So, are almost 60% of deleted questions and less than 20% of questions actually engaging in valuable discussion enough to disable this feature again? If not, what are the thresholds? If there’s someone who can search for deleted posts, maybe more data can be provided. Shog9’s answer says “If [users misusing this feature] happens with too much frequency, we’re just going to have to turn this off again; […] If we don’t hold up our end of the bargain, this has to go back off”. In terms of quantity, I would say it is happening with “too much frequency”, currently.