tl;dr: There is no tl;dr. If you don't wish to read the entire thing, then don't worry about it.
I was hoping my month off would've cooled me off a bit or at least given me a different perspective on this whole matter. What I can definitively say is, at least it gave me that new perspective...
I've been meaning to reflect on this sort of paradox with "the limits of community moderation" being what they are, as per my moderator nomination, but it turned into something else along the way.
I'll start with what I believe to be the actual problem here - we can't retain subject-matter experts (SMEs). Another take: the experts we've retained on Stack Overflow have more expertise in the Stack Exchange platform.
As an expert in the field of Java and Spring, I find it incredibly unfulfilling to answer the same ol' questions day in and day out, which are just as broad and as scope-unrestrained as ever before. To make matters even worse, a lot of the questions being asked retread old and already-asked questions, even if the OP doesn't recognize this fact.
If I were just playing the role of subject-matter expert, then I'd get burnt out pretty quickly, since answering the same integer-division question or the same NullPointerException question would exhaust me.
Thankfully, we have the ability to close questions as duplicates, and downvote questions which are not all that particularly good. We also have policies here on Meta which we reference when dealing with questions in a certain way and we can use that as our shield to justify not having to answer the same question or poor questions.
This works... but has its limitations.
- Closing questions is something seen as "unfriendly", which seems to be the buzzword of the year.
- Downvoting poor questions or answers is also seen as "unfriendly".
- The nature of the site itself, which gives and bestows a lot of trust unto a group of people who have spent a lot of time on the site (who may not necessarily be SMEs), festers mistrust amongst those who are unfamiliar with the way the site works (note that this is largely a paraphrase of Jon Ericson's blog post).
- There aren't enough people who willingly and actively exercise this power, nor does the UX appear to be geared to doing so. My waking nightmare is that there will never be a UX update to address this gap.
One part of my hiatus allowed me to see the other side of the fence. We on Meta often build walls of policy, sometimes to the benefit of our own sanity, sometimes to simply avoid answering questions.
This is a very poor situation to be in because it gives Meta the opportunity to have its opinion of certain types of questions (hell, even certain kinds of English) calcify and proliferate since that's the only actual relief we know.
Stack Overflow wants to portray that they have metrics and data that indicate that questions are improving with the new wizard, but if there's no data to back up that claim, then there's nothing to prove that it's accomplishing anything.
What would be the real relief? Demanding better tools.
Oh, I'm getting a frightful shade of déjà vu...
This summer, Shog9 posted an answer which resonated with me.
Water doesn't care what you want. No amount of pleading or nicely-worded signs are going to convince water to wet your parched plants when it wants to tear out a gully and carry away your precious topsoil. You can dam it, drain it, redirect it, slow it... But sooner or later, water always finds its level.
To that effect, no amount of pleading, signs or documentation is going to stop a user from posting a "give me teh codez" question, nor does it stop users from providing an answer.
The only real thing we can do at this point is beg for the tools to start directing the water. Better, more effective tools to help us moderate content - not necessarily increasing the number of votes, but increasing the impact of our actions. The simple reality is that the water is coming, and the simple truth is that all of the most beautifully written prose in the world about what is and is not acceptable on the site is going to get ignored.
All of that to say:
Our energy is better spent
asking fordemanding better tools.
Now here's why I believe that the Stack Overflow I want to build is no longer supported.
- Quality of Life features for moderation are simply not a priority. The big thing that seems to be on the interest of moderation at all is a synonym dashboard. And that was only just this June (2019).
A lot of energy has been spent on this "Welcoming" initiative, which seems to be driving an even deeper wedge between the community. I don't care if someone calls me unwelcoming any more, since it is usually a symptom of their question being closed or downvoted, and the knowledge gap which exists for this
IS NOT MY FAULT
and I'm over being blamed for it. It's the fault of the platform which has consistently failed to communicate to the recipient of those what this actually means, or how to actually correct themselves.
There's still no concrete direction for the site, or community. No employee or CM has provided guidance for what the site should become, and I refuse to spend another second guessing. In other words, if you're not a CM, it doesn't matter what your opinion of the direction of the site should be; it can and will change, because it is an arbitrary and capricious entity.
But in the midst of all of this, Stack Overflow benefits from the raw efforts we put into the site on a daily basis. The services which exist today - Careers and Teams - simply cannot exist if Stack Overflow is a smaller entity. For instance, you couldn't let something like Careers work on Super User; it doesn't have the same order of magnitude of traffic.
Basically: we can hoot and holler as loud as we want to, but at the end of the day, the lights need to stay on.
I couldn't even propose a new Stack Overflow site (analogous to MathOverflow) since that poses several logistic and question-discipline questions which no one seems prepared to have a discussion about.
At this point, I'm just fed up. I once believed that I was helping the site out, only to be referred to as some kind of "aristocrat" who would flog those in need of help with scorpions. (Another paraphrase, but this is how I interpreted it.)
I want to say, "Until the moderation side of the site improves, I don't want to moderate content ever again," but I think I can just leave that first part off. Nothing will change until the Community Management team actually listens to us.
I've seen nothing to convince me that they are, though.