Timeline for Replace question downvotes and closure with a roomba-enabled "no community value" flag
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
25 events
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Nov 14 at 18:20 | comment | added | alife |
People love to categorize the "problem" with Stack Overflow as one being that we're just not nice enough to people, when in reality we're actually really pleasant as long as you follow the rules. Don't tell me otherwise. I'm telling you otherwise.
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Dec 30, 2023 at 11:26 | comment | added | viuser |
and the whole responsibility of content curation sounds more like it should be a full-time job 100 % agree. I think someone paid to do it would be more efficient while also being nicer / more neutral. People who do that enormous labor for free are going to feel special and entitled. Rightfully so. But that's still very problematic.
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Oct 14, 2023 at 21:33 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | @halfer I thought I'd written something like that already, but I can't find it now. Maybe I just keep saying it in comments and convinced myself I dealt with it. | |
Oct 13, 2023 at 20:52 | comment | added | halfer | @KarlKnechtel: do you think there would be value in creating a new question to address the specific point you raise, i.e. an excessive use of the MCVE/NDD flag (perhaps with examples)? I think that would be useful to look at on its own. | |
Sep 17, 2023 at 1:07 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | @RyanM +100 if I could. As much as I'm usually the voice of "close everything now and sort it out later", there is definitely a cohort that thinks every question is supposed to be a debugging question and thus tries to apply "needs debugging details" way too broadly. Which honestly is awful for site quality; "no question should be a debugging question" is also wrong (according to how people who aren't me understand the term "debugging question"), but it's much closer to the truth. The interesting, useful question is what remains after "finding" the bug. | |
Sep 16, 2023 at 0:23 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | Some of those "unnecessarily abrasive" people are very difficult to moderate, as they almost never do one specific thing that clearly crosses a line, but they are regularly toeing the line with snark or similar things. It's difficult to make the call as to when that has happened, and even more difficult to explain the issue to someone who's thinks they're contributing positively (a canned "you should be nicer" mod message is probably not going to be especially useful). | |
Sep 16, 2023 at 0:21 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | But there are also a decent chunk of people whom I would say are unnecessarily abrasive in comments, especially if they think the asker is lazy (even if the asker followed all the rules), and those don't always get flagged. Earlier today I removed a comment (with 5 upvotes) consisting entirely of "Have you checked the documentation?" with a link to the docs; it has never been against the rules to ask questions whose answers are contained somewhere in the docs, as this is true of most questions, and it's a valuable service to have the answer for how to do a specific thing on a dedicated page. | |
Sep 16, 2023 at 0:21 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | Regarding "in reality we're actually really pleasant as long as you follow the rules." ehh, having seen the flag queues, that's not exactly true. Yes, most people are genuinely are very pleasant and helpful. But plenty of people come here with a perfectly reasonable, focused how-to question and get told this isn't a free coding service, and that they need to turn it into a debugging question (I'm paraphrasing the latter half; it is usually some form of demand to show effort). As a moderator, I've tried to address this and had (I think) some success trimming that particular trend back. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 19:58 | comment | added | Dalija Prasnikar Mod | Mandatory reading on "snarky" comments Comments asking for clarification or an MCVE are not rude/abusive Note: The post was written by a moderator because of large number of unjustified comment flags. This is what we are dealing with, people being too way sensitive about receiving any kind of valid criticism on one hand and on the other hand complaining that nobody gave them any kind of feedback. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 19:53 | comment | added | The Guy with The Hat | @Makoto Thank you for clarifying, I understand your point now. I'm not sure I agree with your conclusions, but I can see how the perspective you're working from is valid. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 17:55 | comment | added | Makoto | @TheGuywithTheHat: Put another way, there is a material difference between "I don't like your tone" and "You're actively being harmful to me". People love to conflate the former with the latter, but that is simply not constructive. Having a curt tone doesn't make the person commenting suddenly "rude", and the bad experience is still in the context of how one perceives it, versus anything that any one party actively did. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 17:53 | comment | added | Makoto | @TheGuywithTheHat: You're making my point. There is a tacit difference between perceived snarkiness and actual snarkiness. One of these things can be actioned without the need for a sob story or pleas for us to "be a little nicer". The other is a direct consequence of how many questions we have to answer and how technologists may not always be the best at communicating with others in empathetic tones. (Especially if this isn't their project, or they're not getting compensated for putting in the work.) It takes only 15 rep to flag a post, so on-lookers could flag too. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 17:44 | comment | added | The Guy with The Hat | @Makoto To be clear, I'm talking from the perspective of low-rep users new to the site. Flagging a comment doesn't prevent the unpleasantness of reading a snarky comment in the first place (and also new users probably can't flag anything anyways). Aside from obviously-bad snarky comments, the general commenting of high-rep users on new users' posts can frequently be perceived as unpleasant, even if that's not what the asker intended. If a new user had their question closed with cold/blunt/canned comment(s), I would be surprised if they didn't find their experience/interactions unpleasant. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 16:22 | comment | added | Makoto | @Michael: I don't tend to frame this as a "encourage good behavior" kind of mentality when it comes to comments. Either you're making constructive comments or you're not, and the rules are unequivocal on the matter. You can be suspended site-wide for a period of time if one is not able to make constructive comments. Conversely, one can also be suspended site-wide for raising a lot of superfluous flags, too. So the comments really need to be out of line, not just something that someone could say was "mean" in a certain light. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 16:19 | comment | added | Kevin B | @Michael My understanding is no, there's no comment ban for unconstructive comments, but you can certainly be suspended site-wide for a week for behavior in comments just like you can for behavior anywhere else on site. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 16:17 | comment | added | Michael come lately | @Gimby and Makoto: Is there a comment-ban from accruing too many comment flags? It's great that you can get a question-ban for too many unconstructive questions. Why not a little time-out from commenting for unconstructive comments? We want to encourage good behavior from all sides. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 14:26 | comment | added | Makoto | @TheGuywithTheHat: Flag the snarky comments. No need to complain about that, You™ have the power to deal with that already. The other two things are hard to explicitly quantify as someone directly going out of their way to be unplesant; that's a side-effect of the platform in how it communicates question closure and also how to reverse it if a closure was done in error. | |
Sep 15, 2023 at 8:03 | comment | added | Gimby | @TheGuywithTheHat I wish we could prevent the comments, but alas all we can do is flag them. | |
Sep 14, 2023 at 22:29 | comment | added | The Guy with The Hat | @Makoto The complaints that people tend to have are (speaking very broadly): snarky/useless comments that misunderstand the questions, and incorrect question closure with little recourse (no actionable comments, and failure to get enough votes to reopen). | |
Sep 14, 2023 at 21:42 | comment | added | Makoto | @TheGuywithTheHat: So what made the interaction unpleasant? Did someone ask a question that was off-topic? Did the answerer leave a snarky comment? | |
Sep 14, 2023 at 21:38 | comment | added | The Guy with The Hat | "we're actually really pleasant as long as you follow the rules. Don't tell me otherwise." I will tell you otherwise. I'm usually on the side of "the meta folks" as opposed to the company or the general public, but in this case I disagree slightly. I think the disconnect comes from the fact that most people who follow the rules have a good experience, but there are some rule-following people who are affected by "unpleasant" high-rep users. Certainly not all the time, but I think it happens often enough to color the opinion of the general public. | |
Sep 14, 2023 at 14:42 | comment | added | Gimby | I would more say that the beta version of Stack Overflow has fallen, a long time ago. The one where meta meant something and feature requests were actually looked at. What we have now is the release version where the company has taken the reigns and we're just along for the ride. And it is a pretty resilient version I must say. It has outgrown itself so much that it is impossible to effectively curate, yet it keeps on chugging along. | |
Sep 14, 2023 at 2:16 | comment | added | Makoto | @zcoop98: It's still all bundled into the same "new user experience" package, since new users tend to just...ask questions. So they try to improve that. But then you also have things like the Welcome Wagon, experimenting with an additional "like" button, increasing the rep gained from upvotes from 5 to 10...all so new users can "get a leg up". But then there's the solid few of us that bother to transcend that to see what else there is to this site, and discover curation. It's pretty well hidden, to be fair. Doesn't seem like there's a lot of energy spent on promoting it. | |
Sep 13, 2023 at 22:58 | comment | added | zcoop98 | I'm not sure I'd phrase it as "the company put way more emphasis on the new user experience"; I think it's more along the lines of "...more emphasis on streamlining the asking experience". I haven't been around nearly as long as you, so I definitely carry less context, but one of my biggest gripes with SO is just how little seems to exist for new users who want to do more than ask and leave. Trying to join and engage as a curator is abysmally hard; I feel like there's zero onboarding that you don't have to go digging for of your own volition, if you can even find it in the first place. | |
Sep 13, 2023 at 21:40 | history | answered | Makoto | CC BY-SA 4.0 |