Every so often, but more frequently than we'd like, we get a question blocked user who is so desperate to ask a new question that they take one of their existing questions and completely replace it with a new question. They quite often then raise a bounty on the new question.
Now if the question has no answers it's not really a problem. Yes, it's abuse of the system but no one has been disadvantaged by this and if the new question is any good it might actually help the OP get out of their ban. (Let's ignore the fact that the only non-negative scoring questions the user has might actually have answers). In these cases perhaps just a "low priority" flag is needed so we can investigate and see if further action is warranted.
The real problem arises when the edit invalidates all the existing answers and is compounded when people answer the new question in the hope of earning the bounty.
So, should we do one, some or all of the following when a question banned user tries to edit and add a bounty to a question that has already been answered?
- Just raise a flag for the moderators to look at this.
- Block the edit completely.
- Prevent a bounty being raised.
The obvious questions are:
- What's a moderator going to do with the flag? All we can do is roll back the edit, refund the bounty and warn the user, far better to stop them in the first place. However, if nothing else is done it at least allows us to fix the issue before anyone answers the "new" question.
- How do we determine what a "radical" edit is? Percentage of text changed, changes to tags? How do we prevent this firing for legitimate cleanups of an initial poor question?
- Again, what criteria do we use here?
NOTE: These checks don't have to just apply to question blocked users, we do get users who aren't banned editing questions and invalidating existing answers as well.
Is there anything better we can do?
Java
people can go crazy reading the answers.