Timeline for 2023: a year in moderation
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
22 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Feb 1 at 2:12 | answer | added | bad_coder | timeline score: 1 | |
Jan 26 at 15:57 | comment | added | Shog9 | FWIW, this is why I usually didn't try to split (system) community actions from (collective) community actions and (individual) community actions, @TylerH - it muddies the waters quite a bit in certain categories. The one area I found it useful to take the effort was deletion, as both author deletion and automated deletion account for huge portions of the total in every category; given the more detailed report for that isn't updated anymore, it's nice to see that split here! | |
Jan 26 at 0:00 | answer | added | Bergi | timeline score: 3 | |
Jan 25 at 18:50 | comment | added | Travis J | How many tasks entered the queues? How many close votes were cast? | |
Jan 25 at 15:39 | comment | added | TylerH | @HenryEcker I think you're right, it is based on actions performed by a person, but the suspensions are implemented by the system, so they ought to be in the Community User column, IMO. | |
Jan 25 at 7:38 | comment | added | Lundin | @starball No, I don't know how to find that info at all. I have no idea how to use SEDE nor do I plan to learn it. | |
Jan 25 at 7:28 | comment | added | Lundin | Otherwise we risk getting the same "statistics" as in the news: "The number of traffic accidents in NY have gone up with 5% during the last year." Then later we learn that the city had a population increase of 10% during the same year so the number of traffic accidents per person had actually gone down. Lies, damned lies and statistics... | |
Jan 25 at 7:26 | comment | added | Lundin | These statistics don't tell me much. To make something meaningful out of it we'd need to know the number of active users over the same time period. Then it could also be compared with other years, given that the number of active users those years were known as well. | |
Jan 25 at 2:02 | comment | added | Henry Ecker Mod | How did Community ("the membership of Stack Overflow without diamonds next to their names.") cause 644 "User banned from review" events? I would've thought that automated review suspensions would have been attributed to Community User (user -1). Am I misunderstanding that row? Or is that value in the wrong column? | |
Jan 24 at 23:02 | comment | added | Anon Coward | For those that want to visualize this data, here are the top five metrics that all have stats for the previous 5 years. | |
Jan 24 at 22:03 | comment | added | TylerH | @RyanM I took Roomba to be included in the "numerous deletions that happen automatically". Though that revised number still shows a 30% deletion rate... that's still too high, IMHO. | |
Jan 24 at 22:00 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | @TylerH That's not quite right: questions deleted in 2023 were not necessarily posted in 2023 (and in fact, due to the fact that the abandoned question cleanup takes effect after 365 days, quite likely were not). Of questions posted in 2023, 437,907 were also deleted in 2023 (and from the same query, the corresponding number for answers is 220,736). | |
Jan 24 at 21:53 | comment | added | TylerH | @RyanM Thanks, so we can see that roughly 44.4% of questions posted in 2023 were deleted by "community" actions. That helps inform that we have a significant signal-to-noise problem, AKA an ideal direction for the company to improve the quality of their primary product: Q&A. My gut reaction to that statistic is: it appears to be far too easy to ask a question on Stack Overflow. Significantly increasing friction here will likely increase the quality of new posts, as significantly more effort will be needed. It seems particularly obvious if you compare these stats to those from Staging Ground. | |
Jan 24 at 21:48 | answer | added | starball | timeline score: 6 | |
Jan 24 at 21:45 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | @TylerH via SEDE, that is roughly 821,064 deleted questions and 279,826 deleted answers. This differs from the stats in the question by 52,726 total posts, presumably due to the fact that those stats "ignore[] numerous deletions that happen automatically in response to some other action" (and also the SEDE query is not counting since-undeleted posts). | |
Jan 24 at 20:05 | history | edited | TylerH | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Added a Total column. Hopefully my additions were all correct...
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Jan 24 at 19:52 | comment | added | TylerH | It would also be great to show revisions here. Editing is a huge part of user moderation. And the Community User even does its fair share of editing for things like CommonMark migration, http->https updates, etc. | |
Jan 24 at 19:51 | comment | added | Makyen Mod | @TylerH Those seem like data points that could be obtained from SEDE without too much difficulty. If you're just looking for non-deleted Q&A, it's something that could be done by searching on the site (1,020,631 non-deleted questions; 1,048,938 non-deleted answers). If you want deleted posts, then a mod can get that through searching: (460,603 deleted questions; 222,380 deleted answers). A very rough data point for number of new users can be obtained from public on-site data (user # near end of year - user # near beginning of year): 2,277,333 (assuming sequential assignment of user numbers). | |
Jan 24 at 19:49 | comment | added | TylerH | Users can also self-close via Community based on close flags @jps. That could account for part of it. | |
Jan 24 at 19:46 | history | became hot meta post | |||
Jan 24 at 19:33 | comment | added | jps | What does the number of closed questions by Community User (212,438) tell me? How is the Community User involved in closing questions? I know in the case of duplicates, when the OP agrees, it says closed by community bot, but that's certainly not 75% of all close votes. | |
Jan 24 at 18:27 | history | asked | JNatStaffMod | CC BY-SA 4.0 |