There's a subject I'm pretty good with. I like to share my knowledge with others through answers. Unfortunately, there's another user active in the tag who makes participation extremely frustrating. This user:
Aggressively closes questions as duplicates - which is good, usually! Linking related questions together helps readers and helps consolidate knowledge about a particular problem.
- Even when the target question doesn't have much to do with the original question - which isn't so good (example, example, example, and example)
- Even when the target question doesn't have anything at all to do with the original question - which isn't good (example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, and so many more)
Votes to delete most questions with answers that he has closed
Even when the answers are unquestionably valuable and not covered by any answers on the target (example - this was discussed on Meta earlier. example, example, example, example example example example, example, example, example, example, and example)
And even when the target question has very few votes/linked questions (example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, example, and example - these last two both had two delete votes before being reopened)
Moderators can probably find a great number of similar examples by searching through deleted posts.
From what I understand, duplicate questions are signposts. They help point the poster, answerers, and future readers to a centralized target. If the duplicate question contains answers, those answers often contain useful information or another way of looking at things not covered in the target. I have been under the impression that this provides value to readers which should not be destroyed without good reason.
Of course, if a question has been asked many times already, the existence of the question and any possible answers very likely does not provide value, and deletion is well warranted. But the questions I have seen get deleted are very often not in this category - the linked targets (when they have something to do with the question at all) frequently only have a small number of votes/views/other linked questions.
Some of these closed questions are requests for solutions without showing what the user has tried so far. These questions are usually not high quality - that's what we have downvotes for. But using one's gold badge to close them (sometimes for an unrelated duplicate) just so one has the ability to delete the post later seems like an abuse of the system to me, for a non-♦.
The official help page says:
When should I delete questions?
Closed questions that are of no lasting value whatsoever should be deleted.
Before voting to delete, please check whether there are any good answers; if so, then the question should be flagged for moderator attention as a potential merge candidate. We don't like to lose great answers!
Also, be cautious when deleting questions closed as duplicates; they can serve as a signpost, directing users to useful answers on another question.
Now, it takes three users to vote to delete. One user cannot delete everything themselves. But, a vote to delete pushes the post into the 10k tools list, and if a post gets onto the list, in my observation, there's a halfway decent chance of the post getting deleted, regardless of the quality of the post or the quality of the answers. There are a number of users who visit that page most days and spend most of their delete votes there. With all due respect, I think many of them do not really take time to consider:
Is this post really of such low quality that it and all its answers should be removed from the site?
In contrast, I think some see it as a sink to use up their delete votes. In their defense, a significant majority of posts that appear there really are objectively terrible and don't deserve to remain, at least in my opinion - but there are no audits, it's not a review queue, and there is no real oversight on what gets deleted. If you frequent that page, most days, you will usually see quite a few posts on the list that originate from this user's initial delete vote. (I also have quite a few reasons to believe that some sockpuppetry is going on to make deletion easier - but that's a separate issue)
See this screenshot for an example. Do you see the pattern? The same thing on another day. And another. Many days, a long string of delete votes in that tag is common, without distinction between posts with value and posts without.
Lots of users with the privilege vote to delete every now and then and everyone makes mistakes occasionally. But these aren't just mistakes. This is a systematic attempted deletion of what seems to be most questions in a tag that one user doesn't agree with. (I'm not saying that all of the questions I've linked deserve to remain on the site, but in my opinion, a good chunk of them do. And I'm not asking for action on any of them in particular, it's only the persistent pattern that worries me.)
Is this sort of deletion behavior an acceptable use of one's privileges? It's been going on for many years, and has surely resulted in multiple thousands of questions getting deleted.
Personally, I see it as senselessly destroying value, and I think it serves as a serious chilling effect for any other would-be regular participant in the tag. A well-received, accepted, good-faith answer on an on-topic question has a decent chance of being deleted regardless, if the question happens to rub one particular user the wrong way. But there aren't any official rules against it, and some here may see deletion as justified if the one who posted the question has not included an attempt, or has a fundamental misunderstanding of how pattern matching works, or due to some other reason. What does Meta think?
regex
tag. My first question in that tag got attacked (and I deleted it). I was a ~30K rep user at the time. Since then I have felt that you needed to be really really sure you had an extra extra good and worthy question before posting one in theregex
tag. (Basically, if a tag could be considered "unfriendly", then that tag is. If that level of caution and fear is what SO wants to foster on theregex
tag (in the name of question quality) then it is all good. If not, a bit more friendliness may be in order.