Skip to main content
Rollback to Revision 12
Source Link
Cerbrus
  • 72.7k
  • 65
  • 370
  • 514

The "Meta effect" is a terrible thing for StackOverflowStack Overflow, because it brings a ton of attention to certain questions or answers that is almost entirely negative in nature, and steps should be taken to reduce it imoin my opinion.

Most of the users who browse Meta are either low reputation-reputation users who are confused or upset about certain aspects of the platform (with low karma), or high reputation-reputation users who tend to be overly critical and pedantic and in many cases almost seem to enjoy down-voting other users.

A temporary "freeze" on content/karmavoting was proposed a decade ago, to help reduce the negative effects of participating in Meta, and it was very popular:

Impose a 24 hour voting freeze on questions being discussed on Meta

To date, no action has been taken...

While it would be nice to imagine that every "vote" on this platform was done thoughtfully, by users who areare fair-minded and followingfollow all community guidelines, this is, in fact, wishful thinking and inaccurate and therefore the "Meta effect" greatly discourages participation, I believe, while having almost no positive or constructive purpose that I can think of currently.

Moreover, asking questions on Meta nearly always results in down-votes. This results in a sort of echo chamber among high reputation-reputation users that are often very hostile to other users.

The "Meta effect" is a terrible thing for StackOverflow, because it brings a ton of attention to certain questions or answers that is almost entirely negative in nature, and steps should be taken to reduce it imo.

Most of the users who browse Meta are either low reputation users who are confused or upset about certain aspects of the platform (with low karma), or high reputation users who tend to be overly critical and pedantic and in many cases almost seem to enjoy down-voting other users.

A temporary "freeze" on content/karma was proposed a decade ago, to help reduce the negative effects of participating in Meta, and it was very popular:

Impose a 24 hour voting freeze on questions being discussed on Meta

To date, no action has been taken...

While it would be nice to imagine that every "vote" on this platform was done thoughtfully, by users who are fair-minded and following all community guidelines, this is in fact wishful thinking and inaccurate and therefore the "Meta effect" greatly discourages participation, I believe, while having almost no positive or constructive purpose that I can think of currently.

Moreover, asking questions on Meta nearly always results in down-votes. This results in a sort of echo chamber among high reputation users that are often very hostile to other users.

The "Meta effect" is a terrible thing for Stack Overflow, because it brings a ton of attention to certain questions or answers that is almost entirely negative in nature, and steps should be taken to reduce it in my opinion.

Most of the users who browse Meta are either low-reputation users who are confused or upset about certain aspects of the platform (with low karma), or high-reputation users who tend to be overly critical and pedantic and in many cases almost seem to enjoy down-voting other users.

A temporary "freeze" on content/voting was proposed a decade ago, to help reduce the negative effects of participating in Meta, and it was very popular:

Impose a 24 hour voting freeze on questions being discussed on Meta

To date, no action has been taken...

While it would be nice to imagine that every "vote" on this platform was done thoughtfully, by users who are fair-minded and follow all community guidelines, this is, in fact, wishful thinking and inaccurate and therefore the "Meta effect" greatly discourages participation, I believe, while having almost no positive or constructive purpose that I can think of currently.

Moreover, asking questions on Meta nearly always results in down-votes. This results in a sort of echo chamber among high-reputation users that are often very hostile to other users.

Rollback to Revision 11
Source Link

The "Meta effect" is a terrible thing for Stack OverflowStackOverflow, because it brings a ton of attention to certain questions or answers that is almost entirely negative in nature, and steps should be taken to reduce it in my opinionimo.

Most of the users who browse Meta are either low-reputation reputation users who are confused or upset about certain aspects of the platform (with low karma), or high-reputation reputation users who tend to be overly critical and pedantic and in many cases almost seem to enjoy down-voting other users.

A temporary "freeze" on content/votingkarma was proposed a decade ago, to help reduce the negative effects of participating in Meta, and it was very popular:

Impose a 24 hour voting freeze on questions being discussed on Meta

To date, no action has been taken...

While it would be nice to imagine that every "vote" on this platform was done thoughtfully, by users who are are fair-minded and followfollowing all community guidelines, this is, in fact, wishful thinking and inaccurate and therefore the "Meta effect" greatly discourages participation, I believe, while having almost no positive or constructive purpose that I can think of currently.

Moreover, asking questions on Meta nearly always results in down-votes. This results in a sort of echo chamber among high-reputation reputation users that are often very hostile to other users.

The "Meta effect" is a terrible thing for Stack Overflow, because it brings a ton of attention to certain questions or answers that is almost entirely negative in nature, and steps should be taken to reduce it in my opinion.

Most of the users who browse Meta are either low-reputation users who are confused or upset about certain aspects of the platform (with low karma), or high-reputation users who tend to be overly critical and pedantic and in many cases almost seem to enjoy down-voting other users.

A temporary "freeze" on content/voting was proposed a decade ago, to help reduce the negative effects of participating in Meta, and it was very popular:

Impose a 24 hour voting freeze on questions being discussed on Meta

To date, no action has been taken...

While it would be nice to imagine that every "vote" on this platform was done thoughtfully, by users who are fair-minded and follow all community guidelines, this is, in fact, wishful thinking and inaccurate and therefore the "Meta effect" greatly discourages participation, I believe, while having almost no positive or constructive purpose that I can think of currently.

Moreover, asking questions on Meta nearly always results in down-votes. This results in a sort of echo chamber among high-reputation users that are often very hostile to other users.

The "Meta effect" is a terrible thing for StackOverflow, because it brings a ton of attention to certain questions or answers that is almost entirely negative in nature, and steps should be taken to reduce it imo.

Most of the users who browse Meta are either low reputation users who are confused or upset about certain aspects of the platform (with low karma), or high reputation users who tend to be overly critical and pedantic and in many cases almost seem to enjoy down-voting other users.

A temporary "freeze" on content/karma was proposed a decade ago, to help reduce the negative effects of participating in Meta, and it was very popular:

Impose a 24 hour voting freeze on questions being discussed on Meta

To date, no action has been taken...

While it would be nice to imagine that every "vote" on this platform was done thoughtfully, by users who are fair-minded and following all community guidelines, this is in fact wishful thinking and inaccurate and therefore the "Meta effect" greatly discourages participation, I believe, while having almost no positive or constructive purpose that I can think of currently.

Moreover, asking questions on Meta nearly always results in down-votes. This results in a sort of echo chamber among high reputation users that are often very hostile to other users.

Corrected typo's and spelling mistakes, as suggested by Grammarly (no personal opinion, just tool-assisted corrections)
Source Link
Cerbrus
  • 72.7k
  • 65
  • 370
  • 514

The "Meta effect" is a terrible thing for StackOverflowStack Overflow, because it brings a ton of attention to certain questions or answers that is almost entirely negative in nature, and steps should be taken to reduce it imoin my opinion.

Most of the users who browse Meta are either low reputation-reputation users who are confused or upset about certain aspects of the platform (with low karma), or high reputation-reputation users who tend to be overly critical and pedantic and in many cases almost seem to enjoy down-voting other users.

A temporary "freeze" on content/karmavoting was proposed a decade ago, to help reduce the negative effects of participating in Meta, and it was very popular:

Impose a 24 hour voting freeze on questions being discussed on Meta

To date, no action has been taken...

While it would be nice to imagine that every "vote" on this platform was done thoughtfully, by users who areare fair-minded and followingfollow all community guidelines, this is, in fact, wishful thinking and inaccurate and therefore the "Meta effect" greatly discourages participation, I believe, while having almost no positive or constructive purpose that I can think of currently.

Moreover, asking questions on Meta nearly always results in down-votes. This results in a sort of echo chamber among high reputation-reputation users that are often very hostile to other users.

The "Meta effect" is a terrible thing for StackOverflow, because it brings a ton of attention to certain questions or answers that is almost entirely negative in nature, and steps should be taken to reduce it imo.

Most of the users who browse Meta are either low reputation users who are confused or upset about certain aspects of the platform (with low karma), or high reputation users who tend to be overly critical and pedantic and in many cases almost seem to enjoy down-voting other users.

A temporary "freeze" on content/karma was proposed a decade ago, to help reduce the negative effects of participating in Meta, and it was very popular:

Impose a 24 hour voting freeze on questions being discussed on Meta

To date, no action has been taken...

While it would be nice to imagine that every "vote" on this platform was done thoughtfully, by users who are fair-minded and following all community guidelines, this is in fact wishful thinking and inaccurate and therefore the "Meta effect" greatly discourages participation, I believe, while having almost no positive or constructive purpose that I can think of currently.

Moreover, asking questions on Meta nearly always results in down-votes. This results in a sort of echo chamber among high reputation users that are often very hostile to other users.

The "Meta effect" is a terrible thing for Stack Overflow, because it brings a ton of attention to certain questions or answers that is almost entirely negative in nature, and steps should be taken to reduce it in my opinion.

Most of the users who browse Meta are either low-reputation users who are confused or upset about certain aspects of the platform (with low karma), or high-reputation users who tend to be overly critical and pedantic and in many cases almost seem to enjoy down-voting other users.

A temporary "freeze" on content/voting was proposed a decade ago, to help reduce the negative effects of participating in Meta, and it was very popular:

Impose a 24 hour voting freeze on questions being discussed on Meta

To date, no action has been taken...

While it would be nice to imagine that every "vote" on this platform was done thoughtfully, by users who are fair-minded and follow all community guidelines, this is, in fact, wishful thinking and inaccurate and therefore the "Meta effect" greatly discourages participation, I believe, while having almost no positive or constructive purpose that I can think of currently.

Moreover, asking questions on Meta nearly always results in down-votes. This results in a sort of echo chamber among high-reputation users that are often very hostile to other users.

Rollback to Revision 9
Source Link
Loading
Rollback to Revision 2
Source Link
Cerbrus
  • 72.7k
  • 65
  • 370
  • 514
Loading
Rollback to Revision 7
Source Link
Loading
Rollback to Revision 2
Source Link
Cerbrus
  • 72.7k
  • 65
  • 370
  • 514
Loading
Rollback to Revision 5
Source Link
Loading
Rollback to Revision 2
Source Link
Cerbrus
  • 72.7k
  • 65
  • 370
  • 514
Loading
Rollback to Revision 3
Source Link
Loading
Rollback to Revision 2
Source Link
yivi
  • 47k
  • 30
  • 217
  • 297
Loading
Rollback to Revision 1
Source Link
Loading
there is no "karma" in Stack Overflow. And it's "Stack Overflow", not "StackOverflow"
Source Link
yivi
  • 47k
  • 30
  • 217
  • 297
Loading
Source Link
Loading