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Feb 10, 2020 at 23:29 comment added Travis J @IMSoP - While it is in not as explicit, that doesn't mean it wasn't essentially part of the design. Please see my edit to that section of the answer.
Feb 10, 2020 at 23:28 history edited Travis J CC BY-SA 4.0
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Feb 10, 2020 at 20:22 comment added Travis J @IMSoP - Thanks for leaving the feedback about that, perhaps it was written a little too harshly with regards to system design. You are correct that downvotes are in principle designed to ensure that the best content bubbles to the top, however, the effect of downvotes is different in practice. Users do internalize downvotes in general, but it was maybe not designed in that fashion. I will have to review a little more and see about making an edit to that section.
Feb 9, 2020 at 10:59 comment added IMSoP I was about to upvote this when I got to the part about downvotes. The tour describes voting as the mechanism by which the best content floats to the top; it does not say "if you receive a downvote you should feel bad about it", nor does the tooltip on the downvote button say "give this user a shock, if they can't deal with it that's their problem".
Feb 7, 2020 at 19:37 comment added Travis J @deceze - I too am not really a fan of canned responses. However, system generated messaging has been somewhat successful in the past. Although, the person writing those is I think hopefully enjoying a nice relaxing whiskey right now. As noted, it was mostly just a wishy washy idea to begin with. Iterations welcome :) Perhaps leaving targeted comments with relation to the issue you mean? Like, "needs more detail", and then under that header a group of comments explaining what details were needed?
Feb 7, 2020 at 10:04 comment added deceze Mod For the record, I'm not a big fan of canned responses, I don't think they do a lot of good. They're too wishy washy to really tell anyone in particular what it is they need to improve. If you're going to give any feedback that's supposed to be helpful, it needs to be specific to that particular user and post. Which is obviously a Catch-22 with trying to get rid of freeform comments. Perhaps something like Github's merge request feedback mechanism, where you can leave comments on specific lines of code would be a possible approach…?
Feb 7, 2020 at 7:15 comment added Travis J @CodyGray - Shog once explained to me that when they were first designing feedback mechanisms, users would use whatever was available to indicate low quality, even if that wasn't the intended use, just to send the signal that something was problematic with the post. I think this situation is a prime example of that, and I thought maybe something out-of-the-box would help it improve. That said, my confidence in feature creation is pretty close to 0 at this point, so it was really more of a thought experiment than something seriously considered.
Feb 7, 2020 at 7:12 comment added Travis J @CodyGray - Users want posts to improve, not to close them. However, the only signal currently available is to downvote, close vote / flag, or comment. Many users are simply resigned to the idea that if a post is in bad shape, it will probably end up getting deleted in that same shape. They aren't really wrong either. We need more OP edits. It would make sense to allow for an additional channel of providing feedback prior to closure to get the OP some sort of indication of what might be needed to improve the post. Once closed, reopen stats are very low.
Feb 7, 2020 at 3:10 comment added Cody Gray Mod Why does it need to be outside of the closure system?
Feb 7, 2020 at 0:07 history answered Travis J CC BY-SA 4.0