Skip to main content
grammar fix
Source Link
Mark Amery
  • 153.5k
  • 15
  • 128
  • 195

As the proud owner of 116 necromancer badges, I disagree. Sometimes a question is popular and highly-visible, yet it'sits top answers are wholly inadequate or outdated. To grab a few examples from the top of the "answers" tab in my profile, this and this and this and this are all examples of cases where I provided an entirely new answer to an old question, because I felt that none of the existing ones were adequate, and it rose to the top or near the top of the answer list. These are some of my most useful contributions to the site, and I worry I wouldn't've been able to give them in the world you envisage.

As the proud owner of 116 necromancer badges, I disagree. Sometimes a question is popular and highly-visible, yet it's top answers are wholly inadequate or outdated. To grab a few examples from the top of the "answers" tab in my profile, this and this and this and this are all examples of cases where I provided an entirely new answer to an old question, because I felt that none of the existing ones were adequate, and it rose to the top or near the top of the answer list. These are some of my most useful contributions to the site, and I worry I wouldn't've been able to give them in the world you envisage.

As the proud owner of 116 necromancer badges, I disagree. Sometimes a question is popular and highly-visible, yet its top answers are wholly inadequate or outdated. To grab a few examples from the top of the "answers" tab in my profile, this and this and this and this are all examples of cases where I provided an entirely new answer to an old question, because I felt that none of the existing ones were adequate, and it rose to the top or near the top of the answer list. These are some of my most useful contributions to the site, and I worry I wouldn't've been able to give them in the world you envisage.

added 4 characters in body
Source Link
wim
  • 361k
  • 7
  • 38
  • 66
  • Encourage dedicated users who are willing to do so to look over all the answers when they read a highly-viewed question, and downvote/delete the duds
  • Make votes on multiple answers to the same question only count as one vote for the purpose of the daily vote limit, so that the point above is actually possible to do on questions with >40 bad answers without spreading the work over multiple days.
  • Restrict Late Answer reviews on highly-viewed questions to >10k users, who have delete votes and are likely to be more aggressive about downvoting
  • Build community tooling (or maybe add onto Smoke Detector, if appropriate - I'm not familiar with the bots) to highlight new answers to highly-viewed old questions for scrutiny - like the Late Answer review queue, but more focussed on high-view questions.
  1. Encourage dedicated users who are willing to do so to look over all the answers when they read a highly-viewed question, and downvote/delete the duds
  2. Make votes on multiple answers to the same question only count as one vote for the purpose of the daily vote limit, so that the point above is actually possible to do on questions with >40 bad answers without spreading the work over multiple days.
  3. Restrict Late Answer reviews on highly-viewed questions to >10k users, who have delete votes and are likely to be more aggressive about downvoting
  4. Build community tooling (or maybe add onto Smoke Detector, if appropriate - I'm not familiar with the bots) to highlight new answers to highly-viewed old questions for scrutiny - like the Late Answer review queue, but more focussed on high-view questions.
  • Encourage dedicated users who are willing to do so to look over all the answers when they read a highly-viewed question, and downvote/delete the duds
  • Make votes on multiple answers to the same question only count as one vote for the purpose of the daily vote limit, so that the point above is actually possible to do on questions with >40 bad answers without spreading the work over multiple days.
  • Restrict Late Answer reviews on highly-viewed questions to >10k users, who have delete votes and are likely to be more aggressive about downvoting
  • Build community tooling (or maybe add onto Smoke Detector, if appropriate - I'm not familiar with the bots) to highlight new answers to highly-viewed old questions for scrutiny - like the Late Answer review queue, but more focussed on high-view questions.
  1. Encourage dedicated users who are willing to do so to look over all the answers when they read a highly-viewed question, and downvote/delete the duds
  2. Make votes on multiple answers to the same question only count as one vote for the purpose of the daily vote limit, so that the point above is actually possible to do on questions with >40 bad answers without spreading the work over multiple days.
  3. Restrict Late Answer reviews on highly-viewed questions to >10k users, who have delete votes and are likely to be more aggressive about downvoting
  4. Build community tooling (or maybe add onto Smoke Detector, if appropriate - I'm not familiar with the bots) to highlight new answers to highly-viewed old questions for scrutiny - like the Late Answer review queue, but more focussed on high-view questions.
added 25 characters in body; added 179 characters in body
Source Link
Mark Amery
  • 153.5k
  • 15
  • 128
  • 195

No, but there are plenty where at least one high-quality new answer was warranted after > 1 page of pointless crap had accumulated. The existence of a couple of dozen crap answers that add nothing does not imply that the best answers so far are flawless, or even that they are correct or adequate. As such, the implicit argument here that goes something like "there are pretty much never more than 5-or-so distinct good answers to a question, therefore once we have 5-or-so answers, plus some safety margin, there cannot be any more distinct good answers to provide" is a fallacy. It's almost always a mistake to remove the opportunity for people to give us diamonds just because lots of other people gave us glass.

No, but there are plenty where at least one new answer was warranted after 1 page of crap had accumulated. The existence of a couple of dozen crap answers that add nothing does not imply that the best answers so far are flawless, or even that they are correct or adequate. It's almost always a mistake to remove the opportunity for people to give us diamonds just because lots of other people gave us glass.

No, but there are plenty where at least one high-quality new answer was warranted after > 1 page of pointless crap had accumulated. The existence of a couple of dozen crap answers that add nothing does not imply that the best answers so far are flawless, or even that they are correct or adequate. As such, the implicit argument here that goes something like "there are pretty much never more than 5-or-so distinct good answers to a question, therefore once we have 5-or-so answers, plus some safety margin, there cannot be any more distinct good answers to provide" is a fallacy. It's a mistake to remove the opportunity for people to give us diamonds just because lots of other people gave us glass.

added 2272 characters in body
Source Link
Mark Amery
  • 153.5k
  • 15
  • 128
  • 195
Loading
Source Link
Mark Amery
  • 153.5k
  • 15
  • 128
  • 195
Loading