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Ian Kemp
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TheYes, and the reason is simple: burnination has been fundamentally broken for a long time, and most people involved in it have finally realised this and stopped wasting their time on a painful, pointless, joyless exercise.

There's nothing quite like painstakingly sifting through hundreds of questions, one by one, reading and understanding each question and potentially editing it manually to remove the tag to be burninated, and heaving a sigh of relief when you're done... only to see a variation of that same tag be nominated for burnination a year, or less, later.

Burnination is a case of closing the stable door after the horse has bolted. As a software developer, it's my job to build a door that doesn't swing open in the breeze, not clean up after the damn horse again and again and again. Because that's wasteful, and I have better things to do with my time.

Until or unless burnination is made mostly unnecessary (by SE Inc. restricting the creation of new tags); and/or far less manual and far less convoluted (by SE Inc. building tools to streamline the process, while simultaneously throwing Shog's arcane burnination laws into the trashbin of history where they belong), people just aren't going to bother.

Finally, itIt definitely doesn't help that the Meta.SO moderation community is continually shedding users at an incredible rate. I personally have stopped participating in any sort of moderation since my most recent suspension (in which one of my crimes was cited as, I kid you not, the use of sarcasm) and given Stack Overflow's current trajectory (nose-first into the ground at terminal velocity from 20km up) I don't see myself ever resuming.

The reason is simple: burnination has been fundamentally broken for a long time, and most people involved in it have finally realised this and stopped wasting their time on a painful, pointless, joyless exercise.

There's nothing quite like painstakingly sifting through hundreds of questions, one by one, reading and understanding each question and potentially editing it manually to remove the tag to be burninated, and heaving a sigh of relief when you're done... only to see a variation of that same tag be nominated for burnination a year, or less, later.

Burnination is a case of closing the stable door after the horse has bolted. As a software developer, it's my job to build a door that doesn't swing open in the breeze, not clean up after the damn horse again and again and again. Because that's wasteful, and I have better things to do with my time.

Until or unless burnination is made mostly unnecessary (by SE Inc. restricting the creation of new tags); and/or far less manual and far less convoluted (by SE Inc. building tools to streamline the process, while simultaneously throwing Shog's arcane burnination laws into the trashbin of history where they belong), people just aren't going to bother.

Finally, it definitely doesn't help that the Meta.SO moderation community is continually shedding users at an incredible rate. I personally have stopped participating in any sort of moderation since my most recent suspension (in which one of my crimes was cited as, I kid you not, the use of sarcasm) and given Stack Overflow's current trajectory (nose-first into the ground at terminal velocity from 20km up) I don't see myself ever resuming.

Yes, and the reason is simple: burnination has been fundamentally broken for a long time, and most people involved in it have finally realised this and stopped wasting their time on a painful, pointless, joyless exercise.

There's nothing quite like painstakingly sifting through hundreds of questions, one by one, reading and understanding each question and potentially editing it manually to remove the tag to be burninated, and heaving a sigh of relief when you're done... only to see a variation of that same tag be nominated for burnination a year, or less, later.

Burnination is a case of closing the stable door after the horse has bolted. As a software developer, it's my job to build a door that doesn't swing open in the breeze, not clean up after the damn horse again and again and again. Because that's wasteful, and I have better things to do with my time.

Until or unless burnination is made mostly unnecessary (by SE Inc. restricting the creation of new tags); and/or far less manual and far less convoluted (by SE Inc. building tools to streamline the process, while simultaneously throwing Shog's arcane burnination laws into the trashbin of history where they belong), people just aren't going to bother.

It definitely doesn't help that the Meta.SO moderation community is continually shedding users at an incredible rate. I personally have stopped participating in any sort of moderation since my most recent suspension (in which one of my crimes was cited as, I kid you not, the use of sarcasm) and given Stack Overflow's current trajectory (nose-first into the ground at terminal velocity from 20km up) I don't see myself ever resuming.

Source Link
Ian Kemp
  • 29.8k
  • 12
  • 116
  • 167

The reason is simple: burnination has been fundamentally broken for a long time, and most people involved in it have finally realised this and stopped wasting their time on a painful, pointless, joyless exercise.

There's nothing quite like painstakingly sifting through hundreds of questions, one by one, reading and understanding each question and potentially editing it manually to remove the tag to be burninated, and heaving a sigh of relief when you're done... only to see a variation of that same tag be nominated for burnination a year, or less, later.

Burnination is a case of closing the stable door after the horse has bolted. As a software developer, it's my job to build a door that doesn't swing open in the breeze, not clean up after the damn horse again and again and again. Because that's wasteful, and I have better things to do with my time.

Until or unless burnination is made mostly unnecessary (by SE Inc. restricting the creation of new tags); and/or far less manual and far less convoluted (by SE Inc. building tools to streamline the process, while simultaneously throwing Shog's arcane burnination laws into the trashbin of history where they belong), people just aren't going to bother.

Finally, it definitely doesn't help that the Meta.SO moderation community is continually shedding users at an incredible rate. I personally have stopped participating in any sort of moderation since my most recent suspension (in which one of my crimes was cited as, I kid you not, the use of sarcasm) and given Stack Overflow's current trajectory (nose-first into the ground at terminal velocity from 20km up) I don't see myself ever resuming.