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blackgreen Mod
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The more views a question has, the more common is the issue it addresses. At a certain point when you have a bunch of answers all with score in the hundreds, as a newbie to the technology, you may be hard-pressed to pick one over the others. The company stamp may actually help speed up the search for approved solutions, and keep up with the evolution of the technology. It might even turn out as a solution to outdated answers. For example, in this answer (How to efficiently concatenate strings in go), the Collective mark is kinda low-key and does the job of pointing you to the solution right away. I'm going to hypothesize that the actual benefit of this Collective mark is inverselydirectly proportional to the number of views.

I, for one, don't like the trade off, but the only way to keep caring for the community isI’m interested to, well, keep caring.. see how it pans out.

The more views a question has, the more common is the issue it addresses. At a certain point when you have a bunch of answers all with score in the hundreds, as a newbie to the technology, you may be hard-pressed to pick one over the others. The company stamp may actually help speed up the search for approved solutions, and keep up with the evolution of the technology. It might even turn out as a solution to outdated answers. For example, in this answer (How to efficiently concatenate strings in go), the Collective mark is kinda low-key and does the job of pointing you to the solution right away. I'm going to hypothesize that the actual benefit of this Collective mark is inversely proportional to the number of views.

I, for one, don't like the trade off, but the only way to keep caring for the community is to, well, keep caring...

The more views a question has, the more common is the issue it addresses. At a certain point when you have a bunch of answers all with score in the hundreds, as a newbie to the technology, you may be hard-pressed to pick one over the others. The company stamp may actually help speed up the search for approved solutions, and keep up with the evolution of the technology. It might even turn out as a solution to outdated answers. For example, in this answer (How to efficiently concatenate strings in go), the Collective mark is kinda low-key and does the job of pointing you to the solution right away. I'm going to hypothesize that the actual benefit of this Collective mark is directly proportional to the number of views.

I, for one, don't like the trade off, but I’m interested to see how it pans out.

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blackgreen Mod
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The "earn your privileges" model seems great to me. Earning high rep requires a lot of effort and time. During that period you learn "How-to SO".

The other side of the story is that if the Collective admins earn privileges just like all other users, the community will still have to moderate their content in the meantime. As Makoto said here, there's the potential for some tension here.

If very low rep Collective admins are given moderation powers, they may not be accustomed to SO practices. However the SO staff has mentioned that there is a training program for that, so we'll see.

I'm also concerned about the effect of "Recommended answer" and "Recognized user". I fear it will give a voting-bias by attracting readers to those/their answers and consequently impact the voting system as we know it.

I share your concern that the new features as "Recommended Answers" and "Recognized User" have the potential to sway voting patterns in a way that subtracts from the collective effort and democracy of the current system. This is basically what I expressed here.

Though the current voting system is not going to change overnight. Useful content will still be useful. However, official company stamps will grant more weight and credibility to selected content by simply being there. Today when two answers appear on the same question, they have to be vetted based on their merits alone. The company stamp will interfere with this process and may end up diminishing the merits of unsanctioned answers. The process becomes less transparent, and, ultimately, less free.

It's a looming presence on the community.

However...

When administered with great care and with respect, the Collective stamp may produce some benefits for everyone. I want to point out these two circumstances:

Highlight the best1 answer in highly viewed questions

The more views a question has, the more common is the issue it addresses. At a certain point when you have a bunch of answers all with score in the hundreds, as a newbie to the technology, you may be hard-pressed to pick one over the others. The company stamp may actually help speed up the search for approved solutions, and keep up with the evolution of the technology. It might even turn out as a solution to outdated answers. For example, in this answer (How to efficiently concatenate strings in go), the Collective mark is kinda low-key and does the job of pointing you to the solution right away. I'm going to hypothesize that the actual benefit of this Collective mark is inversely proportional to the number of views.

Where this can fail

  1. This still has a negative impact on essentially all answers that appear below the marked one. If you are in a hurry, you'll probably stop there and don't even look at other answers. Is there a gem down there? Who knows.
  2. On low view questions or new questions with only low score answers, the Collective mark will give much more weight to the marked answer and sway voting or outright invalidate non-marked answers.

So in the end it'll depend on where and how the Collective mark is used.

1: definitions of "best" may vary

Give credibility to experts that happen to not use Stack Overflow

The "Recognized User" mark has the benefit of giving instant credibility to users who are renown experts in the technology but just happen to seldom use Stack Overflow.

For example, Bryan Mills is one of the maintainers of the Go language and until a couple days ago his SO profile didn't mention that. Of course people who are familiar with the Go project know who Bryan is, but all others probably don't. So when Bryan answers a question with his 900 rep, the "Recognized User" mark will make it clear that he does know what he's talking about, even if you don't know him.

Where this can fail

  1. answers may get upvotes "out of trust" without being actually read and vetted

In this particular case of Bryan Mills, I don't think this will ever be a big problem, but again, it does place influence in the hands of few. Is this going to not be a problem with any Collective we may have in the future? Heh...


So overall I can see some actual benefits in Collectives, at the expense of established Stack Overflow practices. It is clearly a trade off. Maybe the Go Collective enjoys admins and Recognized Users who will operate with respect of the community and in its best interest. Maybe they will use these features to actually reduce noise and improve the Q&A process, without getting in the way of how the site typically works.

Maybe future Collectives will have less respectful admins and members, and there will be situations of abuse.

Whether it will all be worth it, whether this paid company stamps and sponsored content will end up improving things or yield to corporate opaqueness, only time will tell.

I, for one, don't like the trade off, but the only way to keep caring for the community is to, well, keep caring...