Here's an interesting situation I came across recently that I thought could be an object lesson in what is wrong with Stack Overflow these days. (None of this is particularly new, but examples help to concretise problems.)
A new user, let's call them Alice, posted the following as an Answer below a question:
Hi $userName; could you add the code you are working with now so we have an idea as to how to help you? — Alice
Another user, let's call them Bob, commented:
This is the Answer section. Do not ask questions of the poster here. Please delete this. — Bob
Alice responds:
Bob, I am trying to help by answering the question. I noticed this question got a downvote already so I hoped to actually help instead. I don't yet have the ability to comment so I didn't have any alternative to ask for clarification. — Alice
Bob responds:
There are reasons you aren't able to comment and it gives you no permission to put comments or questions here. Please delete this. — Bob
Alice later posted this on Meta:
[..] Here I was trying to contribute to this forum when I made the horrendous mistake of asking for clarification of a brand new user question. I got rude comments from a decade long user constantly asking Me to delete my response. I flagged his comment and now I have even less privileges than I started with! How am I supposed to feel welcomed? I don’t want to post anything in fear that it will be downvoted or randomly be subjected to abusive comments that get deleted? Right now it just feels like there is no room for me here.
(All these posts have been removed in the meantime.)
Dissection
- Alice's intentions were to help the original user; perfectly laudable.
- Bob's first reply was terse, very matter-of-fact. It includes polite phrasing ("please").
- Alice's reply shows she was aware of the commenting restriction and decided to ignore it, albeit with noble intentions. She doesn't remove her "answer".
- Bob's second reply is still very matter-of-fact, but can certainly start to feel hostile. Still contains polite phrasing.
- Alice's Meta post seems a bit hyperbolic without context:
- plays down her ignoring of the commenting restriction as "horrendous mistake"
- it doesn't matter how long Bob has been around, but somehow it appears to feel relevant to Alice
- two comments hardly constitutes "constantly"
- it's unclear what "less privileges" means exactly
- "abusive" is a strong word for matter-of-fact comments
- Alice thinks of Stack Overflow as a "forum".
- Alice fears downvotes.
Conclusions
- Bob certainly could have phrased that a lot better. That is indisputable. However, depending on Bob's English language ability, that was maybe the best he could do. At the very least it sounds like he didn't intend to spend too much time on the topic and was typing only the minimum necessary.
- None of this would have happened if Alice hadn't ignored the commenting restriction.
- The commenting restrictions may contribute to people feeling unwelcome as a "systemic problem". Perhaps it should be rethought whether it's still necessary as is; or it needs to be communicated more clearly through improved UX that answers aren't a substitute.
- The system as such may be too arcane to be easily accessible to new users, which makes it unwelcoming. At the very least it's too easy to mistake it for a regular "forum", which it isn't.
- One of the most basic principles of the system, downvotes, stirs negative emotions in users.
- We need to see the entire context before taking anyone's word for what exactly is "unwelcoming".
To me it seems that something like 80% of this problem is "systematic", as in, by design of the site. Bob's second less-than-smooth comment was the trigger, but it wasn't the core problem. Would you agree, or draw different conclusions? What specifically could be changed to prevent this exact situation from occurring again?