When people ask why there is so much old, upvoted content that would not be tolerated if posted today, it is often commented that the rules were "different" back then. For example, see here on Meta.SE. The existence of the Historical Lock itself testifies to some level of scope change.
What were the original rules for posting on Stack Overflow? I'm talking about the elder days, when dinosaurs walked the earth and Jon Skeet was still under 3k, yea, even 2008 of memory.
From old posts that I have encountered, it seems that I can guess as to the following:
- Primarily opinion-based and resource request questions were allowed.
- Link-only answers were discouraged, but were tolerated and sometimes even upvoted.
- Spam and hate speech were still banned.
Has a copy of the original requirements for questions and answers been preserved, or can someone give a summary of what content was and was not allowed at the time the site launched?
For example (these are not additional questions, but springboards to help with the original question):
- To the extent that certain now-banned content was allowed back then, was it simply allowed without restriction or was there some level of regulation, even if less strict than today? For example, perhaps resource request questions were allowed, but only for books and tools, and asking for tutorial recommendations was banned even then.
- On the other hand, was there any content that was banned back then but is now allowed? For example, maybe programming questions on Visual Basic 6 were originally considered off-topic, with that changing in the VB6 Liberation Wars of Summer 2010.