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CodeCaster
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Scenario:

  1. There is a site that once wanted to be one great knowledge base about everything programming-related, where users collectively improve this knowledge by collaborative editing and voting.
  2. There are a lot of people incapable of asking an answerable, useful, unique question.
  3. There are a lot of people incapable of providing valuable answers.
  4. Posts from #2 and #3 get posted a lot. People who still care somewhat about quality, downvote such posts.
  5. Posters who get their post downvoted don't understand why, and post a comment asking for clarification.
  6. Some users, such as me sometimes, then try to care enough to try and educate them, by explaining why their post could be downvoted. This usually results in endless discussion, revenge downvoting, being ignored or in very rare occasions in a "Thanks, you were right, I learned something", followed by an edit or deletion of this post.

Solution:

  • Let's make it easier to remove comments asking why posts were downvoted.

Or, you know, there could be harsher actions against revenge downvoting. Or a flag option that says "Some more experts in this tag should look at this post and it's spreading misinformation or a bad practice and should probably be deleted altogether". Also, if this comment comes from a user genuinely not knowing what they did wrong, and all they get are links to page long FAQs that don't contain very explicitly what they did "wrong" (if anything), we now have a user who doesn't know what they did wrong and wondering where their comment went.

I don't want to offend the flaggers, moderators, queue warriors and flag burninators, but in my opinion the biggest problem of the site is still the average post quality and the way that's handled (i.e. saying "Just downvote and move on" for more than ten years).

Sure, removing 350 "why the downvote?" comments may feel like a great cleanup for some, and if it's really that big a burden on the mod team it may be something worth looking into, but for me it still feels like a lot of effort for zero real benefit.

tl;dr: no.

Scenario:

  1. There is a site that once wanted to be one great knowledge base about everything programming-related, where users collectively improve this knowledge by collaborative editing and voting.
  2. There are a lot of people incapable of asking an answerable, useful, unique question.
  3. There are a lot of people incapable of providing valuable answers.
  4. Posts from #2 and #3 get posted a lot. People who still care somewhat about quality, downvote such posts.
  5. Posters who get their post downvoted don't understand why, and post a comment asking for clarification.
  6. Some users, such as me sometimes, then try to care enough to try and educate them, by explaining why their post could be downvoted. This usually results in endless discussion, revenge downvoting, being ignored or in very rare occasions in a "Thanks, you were right, I learned something", followed by an edit or deletion of this post.

Solution:

  • Let's make it easier to remove comments asking why posts were downvoted.

Or, you know, there could be harsher actions against revenge downvoting. Or a flag option that says "Some more experts in this tag should look at this post and it's spreading misinformation or a bad practice and should probably be deleted altogether".

I don't want to offend the flaggers, moderators, queue warriors and flag burninators, but in my opinion the biggest problem of the site is still the average post quality and the way that's handled (i.e. saying "Just downvote and move on" for more than ten years).

Sure, removing 350 "why the downvote?" comments may feel like a great cleanup for some, and if it's really that big a burden on the mod team it may be something worth looking into, but for me it still feels like a lot of effort for zero real benefit.

tl;dr: no.

Scenario:

  1. There is a site that once wanted to be one great knowledge base about everything programming-related, where users collectively improve this knowledge by collaborative editing and voting.
  2. There are a lot of people incapable of asking an answerable, useful, unique question.
  3. There are a lot of people incapable of providing valuable answers.
  4. Posts from #2 and #3 get posted a lot. People who still care somewhat about quality, downvote such posts.
  5. Posters who get their post downvoted don't understand why, and post a comment asking for clarification.
  6. Some users, such as me sometimes, then try to care enough to try and educate them, by explaining why their post could be downvoted. This usually results in endless discussion, revenge downvoting, being ignored or in very rare occasions in a "Thanks, you were right, I learned something", followed by an edit or deletion of this post.

Solution:

  • Let's make it easier to remove comments asking why posts were downvoted.

Or, you know, there could be harsher actions against revenge downvoting. Or a flag option that says "Some more experts in this tag should look at this post and it's spreading misinformation or a bad practice and should probably be deleted altogether". Also, if this comment comes from a user genuinely not knowing what they did wrong, and all they get are links to page long FAQs that don't contain very explicitly what they did "wrong" (if anything), we now have a user who doesn't know what they did wrong and wondering where their comment went.

I don't want to offend the flaggers, moderators, queue warriors and flag burninators, but in my opinion the biggest problem of the site is still the average post quality and the way that's handled (i.e. saying "Just downvote and move on" for more than ten years).

Sure, removing 350 "why the downvote?" comments may feel like a great cleanup for some, and if it's really that big a burden on the mod team it may be something worth looking into, but for me it still feels like a lot of effort for zero real benefit.

tl;dr: no.

Source Link
CodeCaster
  • 151.3k
  • 33
  • 187
  • 311

Scenario:

  1. There is a site that once wanted to be one great knowledge base about everything programming-related, where users collectively improve this knowledge by collaborative editing and voting.
  2. There are a lot of people incapable of asking an answerable, useful, unique question.
  3. There are a lot of people incapable of providing valuable answers.
  4. Posts from #2 and #3 get posted a lot. People who still care somewhat about quality, downvote such posts.
  5. Posters who get their post downvoted don't understand why, and post a comment asking for clarification.
  6. Some users, such as me sometimes, then try to care enough to try and educate them, by explaining why their post could be downvoted. This usually results in endless discussion, revenge downvoting, being ignored or in very rare occasions in a "Thanks, you were right, I learned something", followed by an edit or deletion of this post.

Solution:

  • Let's make it easier to remove comments asking why posts were downvoted.

Or, you know, there could be harsher actions against revenge downvoting. Or a flag option that says "Some more experts in this tag should look at this post and it's spreading misinformation or a bad practice and should probably be deleted altogether".

I don't want to offend the flaggers, moderators, queue warriors and flag burninators, but in my opinion the biggest problem of the site is still the average post quality and the way that's handled (i.e. saying "Just downvote and move on" for more than ten years).

Sure, removing 350 "why the downvote?" comments may feel like a great cleanup for some, and if it's really that big a burden on the mod team it may be something worth looking into, but for me it still feels like a lot of effort for zero real benefit.

tl;dr: no.