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Cody Gray Mod
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I apologise if I've covered the same ground as everyone else - but there's aspects that need to be covered in the totality.

Firstly - I've often found SO only capabilities to be a slippery slope to SO having more and more of a unique codebase, which has occasionally bitten the smaller sites in the rear. You might find that these options might actually scale well, or even work better on smaller sites.

I've tried to address each of those points in turn.

  1. Community editing has always been a critical part of the reopening cycle. Along with critical commentary - some comments and edits can be critical to help reopen a question properly, even after closure.

Privileged users (mods and high rep users) will have a path to access these questions to provide additional coaching and guidance.

Needs to be more explicit in the guidance.

Inbox notifications and emails will alert post authors of newly hidden posts and provide guidance for editing.

Is excellent

To maintain quality, if hidden posts aren’t edited within a certain timeframe, they will be deleted.

I suspect that the most ardent voices for quality would love this

And to mitigate abuse, we’d like to explore dynamic vote thresholds for closing based on age so that newer questions require fewer votes to close than older questions.

To quote Homer (The other one) : I am intrigued by this idea and wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

  1. Literally no disagreement there - but a clarification, is this for closed posts, closed/hidden posts, or the default edit view?

  2. There's a few issues with "automatic reopening on substancial edits"

As a moderator, I have occationally experienced folks trying to get around a question ban by substancially editing very old posts with downvotes or no attention. With this in place - this could get messy.

I wonder if an incremental solution, with "hiding" a post being one state in the lifecycle of a post - then giving it visibility for review before reopening, maybe with lowered thresholds might be an option.

We also already give a reopening vote for edits. We're essentially saying we would treat a new user who has already not demonstrated the ability to ask a good question the same as an experienced user or one with a diamond badge

A clunky option here would be to rename it "on hold", make it visible, and have it pending review... A question as such goes through "Closed/Hidden" -> is reviewed or edited -> becomes visible, and on hold pending review. This might make more people happy about it though.

I apologise if I've covered the same ground as everyone else - but there's aspects that need to be covered in the totality.

Firstly - I've often found SO only capabilities to be a slippery slope to SO having more and more of a unique codebase, which has occasionally bitten the smaller sites in the rear. You might find that these options might actually scale well, or even work better on smaller sites.

I've tried to address each of those points in turn.

  1. Community editing has always been a critical part of the reopening cycle. Along with critical commentary - some comments and edits can be critical to help reopen a question properly, even after closure.

Privileged users (mods and high rep users) will have a path to access these questions to provide additional coaching and guidance.

Needs to be more explicit in the guidance.

Inbox notifications and emails will alert post authors of newly hidden posts and provide guidance for editing.

Is excellent

To maintain quality, if hidden posts aren’t edited within a certain timeframe, they will be deleted.

I suspect that the most ardent voices for quality would love this

And to mitigate abuse, we’d like to explore dynamic vote thresholds for closing based on age so that newer questions require fewer votes to close than older questions.

To quote Homer (The other one) : I am intrigued by this idea and wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

  1. Literally no disagreement there - but a clarification, is this for closed posts, closed/hidden posts, or the default edit view?

  2. There's a few issues with "automatic reopening on substancial edits"

As a moderator, I have occationally experienced folks trying to get around a question ban by substancially editing very old posts with downvotes or no attention. With this in place - this could get messy.

I wonder if an incremental solution, with "hiding" a post being one state in the lifecycle of a post - then giving it visibility for review before reopening, maybe with lowered thresholds might be an option.

We also already give a reopening vote for edits. We're essentially saying we would treat a new user who has already not demonstrated the ability to ask a good question the same as an experienced user or one with a diamond badge

A clunky option here would be to rename it "on hold", make it visible, and have it pending review... A question as such goes through "Closed/Hidden" -> is reviewed or edited -> becomes visible, and on hold pending review. This might make more people happy about it though.

I apologise if I've covered the same ground as everyone else - but there's aspects that need to be covered in the totality.

Firstly - I've often found SO only capabilities to be a slippery slope to SO having more and more of a unique codebase, which has occasionally bitten the smaller sites in the rear. You might find that these options might actually scale well, or even work better on smaller sites.

I've tried to address each of those points in turn.

  1. Community editing has always been a critical part of the reopening cycle. Along with critical commentary - some comments and edits can be critical to help reopen a question properly, even after closure.

Privileged users (mods and high rep users) will have a path to access these questions to provide additional coaching and guidance.

Needs to be more explicit in the guidance.

Inbox notifications and emails will alert post authors of newly hidden posts and provide guidance for editing.

Is excellent

To maintain quality, if hidden posts aren’t edited within a certain timeframe, they will be deleted.

I suspect that the most ardent voices for quality would love this

And to mitigate abuse, we’d like to explore dynamic vote thresholds for closing based on age so that newer questions require fewer votes to close than older questions.

To quote Homer (The other one) : I am intrigued by this idea and wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

  1. Literally no disagreement there - but a clarification, is this for closed posts, closed/hidden posts, or the default edit view?

  2. There's a few issues with "automatic reopening on substancial edits"

As a moderator, I have occationally experienced folks trying to get around a question ban by substancially editing very old posts with downvotes or no attention. With this in place - this could get messy.

I wonder if an incremental solution, with "hiding" a post being one state in the lifecycle of a post - then giving it visibility for review before reopening, maybe with lowered thresholds might be an option.

We also already give a reopening vote for edits. We're essentially saying we would treat a new user who has already not demonstrated the ability to ask a good question the same as an experienced user or one with a diamond badge

A clunky option here would be to rename it "on hold", make it visible, and have it pending review... A question as such goes through "Closed/Hidden" -> is reviewed or edited -> becomes visible, and on hold pending review. This might make more people happy about it though.

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Journeyman Geek
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I apologise if I've covered the same ground as everyone else - but there's aspects that need to be covered in the totality.

Firstly - I've often found SO only capabilities to be a slippery slope to SO having more and more of a unique codebase, which has occasionally bitten the smaller sites in the rear. You might find that these options might actually scale well, or even work better on smaller sites.

I've tried to address each of those points in turn.

  1. Community editing has always been a critical part of the reopening cycle. Along with critical commentary - some comments and edits can be critical to help reopen a question properly, even after closure.

Privileged users (mods and high rep users) will have a path to access these questions to provide additional coaching and guidance.

Needs to be more explicit in the guidance.

Inbox notifications and emails will alert post authors of newly hidden posts and provide guidance for editing.

Is excellent

To maintain quality, if hidden posts aren’t edited within a certain timeframe, they will be deleted.

I suspect that the most ardent voices for quality would love this

And to mitigate abuse, we’d like to explore dynamic vote thresholds for closing based on age so that newer questions require fewer votes to close than older questions.

To quote Homer (The other one) : I am intrigued by this idea and wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

  1. Literally no disagreement there - but a clarification, is this for closed posts, closed/hidden posts, or the default edit view?

  2. There's a few issues with "automatic reopening on substancial edits"

As a moderator, I have occationally experienced folks trying to get around a question ban by substancially editing very old posts with downvotes or no attention. With this in place - this could get messy.

I wonder if an incremental solution, with "hiding" a post being one state in the lifecycle of a post - then giving it visibility for review before reopening, maybe with lowered thresholds might be an option.

We also already give a reopening vote for edits. We're essentially saying we would treat a new user who has already not demonstrated the ability to ask a good question the same as an experienced user or one with a diamond badge

A clunky option here would be to rename it "on hold", make it visible, and have it pending review... A question as such goes through "Closed/Hidden" -> is reviewed or edited -> becomes visible, and on hold pending review. This might make more people happy about it though.