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Jun 28, 2019 at 9:56 comment added Flimm "because newer information still has a long way to go for votes to rise above it. "... and also because accepted answers are pinned to the top (usually forever), no matter how wrong or old or downvoted they are.
Jun 27, 2019 at 12:50 comment added user50049 @Raedwald By nature they'd be community wiki; they'd have to be. All of our research points at folks not being willing to make substantive edits to posts where the original author's user card will remain showing (thus, making it look like they wrote what you did), so for that reason alone canonical posts would have to be wiki-like to not get in the way of folks maintaining them. The rep earned is another consideration we have to discuss, you probably should get some kind of reward for having an answer become canonical, but it doesn't have to be in the form of a bottomless pit of rep :)
Jun 27, 2019 at 8:21 comment added Raedwald There is the danger that these promoted canonical posts will be perceived as an elitist cabal favouring itself. Perhaps allow the feature only for Community Wiki posts?
May 31, 2019 at 19:55 comment added jpaugh What if -- for purposes of sorting -- the graph of votes for each set of answers was linearized (to avoid highly upvoted answers counting too much), and then having each vote count for (say) half as much for each additional year since the question's last edit? Anyway, maybe that's a new angle.
May 31, 2019 at 19:44 comment added jpaugh No matter how you cut it, "canonical questions" is a way to make votes count more, either for certain users (i.e. mods), or for votes cast much later (e.g. this answer is two years old, and now it's wrong.) Instead of weighted votes, why not just add a new, default sort order, weighting answers according to their age as well as their votes?
May 30, 2019 at 15:42 comment added jpmc26 @TimPost Considering your PR problems with curators currently, SO should consider promoting these efforts sooner rather than later. Even with nothing finalized, just knowing something is coming might be helpful. Additionally, if you're going to start segregating "canonical" questions from others, this may represent a fundamental shift in how question quality will be evaluated, maybe even revamping the entire mission of the site. You want to be way ahead of this in terms of getting users ready.
May 29, 2019 at 14:18 comment added user50049 @cs95 That's where I am with it, essentially. Requiring enough people to vote on something so a small cabal organized in chat can't run rampant with it, while keeping it accessible enough to be useful in niche tags (COBOL, I'm looking at you). Might have finally found that use for silver tag badges.
May 29, 2019 at 13:53 comment added cs95 Can't wait to see this "canonical question" feature come out (and see people cook up sundry ways for its abuse :P).
May 29, 2019 at 13:51 vote accept cs95
May 29, 2019 at 13:48 history answered user50049 CC BY-SA 4.0