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Meta already had a discussion on this here, with a wide range of solutions. Unfortunately, it was a , so 8 years later we still have a horribly wrong outdated answer and not-an-answer as two top answers here, and almost two pages of wrong answers here. Upvotes there are still ticking. Mentioned questions were picked because SO is doing particularly bad at displaying a go-to answer, and I also cared enough to try at least writing a semi-decent answer there.

The proposed solution, partially based on previous discussion:

  1. Extend "not an answer" flag to mean what it actually sounds like: the answer not attempting to answer the question;
  2. Put "not an answer" flags into a review queue instead of asking for a moderator attention;
  3. Add a flag for "wrong/outdated answer" that works in the same way as "close" vote. Upvotes from novices for an answer being "helpful" shouldn't balance on the scales with downvotes for the fact it being completely wrong;
  4. Show a message "this answer is wrong/outdated" on top if it was flagged several times as such.
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  • 8
    Your solution does not clearly relate to the problem. Is the issue that the answers are wrong, outdated, or not attempting to answer the question? These are three different problems, with arguably three different solutions.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 18:54
  • 18
    You can't nuke most outdated answers. There will still be folks struggling with legacy systems where the answer is still correct. If the answer has become harmful or has been subsequently discovered to be harmful... That is a problem. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 19:24
  • I didn't propose removing outdated/wrong answers, neither did the linked discussion. It's important to at least mark them as such. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 19:51
  • @RyanM I don't understand how I failed to communicate the problem in the description above, but I'll reiterate: there are wrong/outdated/not-an-answers that are upvoted and keep being upvoted. It signifies someone is still using them in their production. Neither their authors nor readers are at wrong here, the problem is that at the moment there is no way to explicitly communicate the answer is wrong. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 19:54
  • 8
    "wrong/outdated/not-an-answers" these are three different things. Answers that don't attempt to answer the question asked can be mod-flagged with an explanation of how they don't attempt to answer it. Answers that are wrong must have attempted to answer the question in order to be wrong ("Tuesdays, unless it's raining" is not a wrong answer to "How to reverse a list in JavaScript?", for instance). And outdated answers are neither wrong nor non-answers: they're correct, but for a previous version of the system.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 20:23
  • 4
    If the answers are wrong, why have you not downvoted them? Subject mater experts (SMEs) downvoting wrong/unhelpful/bad (but not an outdated answer which clearly says to what versions it does/doesn't apply and/or you can edit that in), in addition to upvoting correct/helpful ones, is a critical part of having quality content on Stack Overflow/Stack Exchange. [Note: I don't know anything about specifically your votes on those posts, but like all users with > 1k rep, I can see that many/most of those answers have no downvotes, so, obviously, you didn't downvote the ones with no downvotes.]
    – Makyen Mod
    Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 20:40
  • Relevant: Introducing Outdated Answers project
    – VLAZ
    Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 20:58
  • @Makyen Unfortunately, I'm out of votes for today, but there actually was only one (probably) correct answer. Now we need exactly 1337 more downvotes to get it on top. I couldn't hope for a 13373r proof that current voting system is completely broken. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 23:46
  • 5
    @polkovnikov.ph you could be wrong too, perhaps the answer was correct but you only think it is wrong. Which is why your downvote brings that answer down from 6 to 5. But if the answer really is wrong then others will agree and also downvote. It would help if you left a comment explaining why the answer is wrong, so it is easier for others to spot the mistake and vote accordingly. Or, perhaps correct the error. But you alone don’t get to have a veto on what is right or wrong.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 23:48
  • @MartijnPieters That's why for every answer I provided a comment with a counterexample. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 23:49
  • 2
    Downvoting is only pointless if no one votes down. Don’t be that guy that doesn’t vote.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 23:50
  • 2
    I don't know if it's obvious only to me, but there is no incentive to downvote. It's exactly the reverse: you get punished with -1s to your own reputation. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 23:53
  • 2
    @polkovnikov.ph your remarks about how downvotes don’t help when a post score goes from 6 to 5 suggest, strongly, that you want something more powerful, it speaks of impatience and a distrust of the voting system. We don’t need a ‘wrong answer’ flag, because voting already handles this. You just have to understand that it can take time.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Commented Aug 20, 2022 at 0:31
  • 1
    @MartijnPieters If 9 years of time is an insufficient scale of time to downvote 40 wrong answers, it doesn't really speak of impatience and subjective distrust in voting system, it speaks the voting system is objectively broken. Commented Aug 20, 2022 at 0:58
  • 1
    If you discourage users from downvoting others to tune anyone with positive vibes or whatever other reason, the website gets filled with really bad, wrong answers. Incidentally, those wrong answers get upvoted, because there is no visual sign to mark them as wrong, no way for novice users to deem them wrong, no nothing. Over years some of them get highly upvoted, primarily for their sheer age. It doesn't get any better, the more time we try to understand it takes time, the worse it gets. Commented Aug 20, 2022 at 1:06

1 Answer 1

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There are flaws with each of these approaches.

  1. Flags go to Moderators and Moderators are not subject matter experts in every possible tag. How could they determine that an answer was wrong when they aren't familiar with the technology?

  2. The trouble with this is pretty much the same, you need to be a subject matter expert otherwise all you can do in the queue is skip, skip, skip. Maybe if you needed to be a gold badge holder in one of the question's tags but then there are plenty of tags with no gold badge holders at all. The queue would eventually fill up with answers that insufficient people are experts on.

  3. Same as 1, who validates the flag? And if there's no queue, how do you know an answer has flags? This seems rather like delete votes on answers and we already have those. You and others in your tag just need 20K reputation and also be willing to use your delete votes.

  4. There is an outdated answers project already so perhaps this addresses this point. Outdated answers are not necessarily useless though, many people end up working with obsolete technologies.

Let's contrast the concept of a wrong answer with what you need to know to vote to close.

  • I don't know what it's asking but there sure are a lot of separate questions - OK I can vote to close as needing more focus.

  • It's asking about the number of calories in a banana - I know that's not programming and so does almost everyone else here.

  • It's in some other language than English - I don't have to understand that language at all to be able to vote to close.

I.e. I probably don't need to be a subject matter expert in the questions tags/technology to know there's a problem.

So what should we do about wrong answers?

Downvote them.

If an answer is highly upvoted and wrong then it's just possible your assessment of it isn't right. Downvoting isn't destructive, you can still see the answer and try it if you like, it just tells you that trying a different answer first may be a better idea.

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  • 1. The proposed solution didn't ask for moderation attention, it specifically tells to put it into review queues, or to collect votes. Particularly, it asked to put "not an answer" handling from moderators to reviewers, because, as you said, moderators are not subject matter experts. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 19:56
  • 2. The good mechanics are already figured out in close votes: several votes, matching reasons, review queue, gold badge to close singledhandledly. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 19:59
  • 3. This is like delete votes, except we don't really want to delete outdated and wrong answers, either because they're still salvageable, or hold historic value. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 20:00
  • 4. I don't know what to comment, other than I'm aware that it exists. I've never seen a discussion there to handle the other offenders: wrong and not-an-answers. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 20:02
  • 2. If the flag provides a description of why the answer is wrong/not-an-answer, it shouldn't require much expertise. In mentioned examples, there is a case when an answer by industry leader recommend a drag and drop library for a question asking for a way to drag something around, where two things only happen to use the word "drag" for completely different concepts, and another case when the lag can be observed just by running provided code snippet. Neither requires profound knowledge of frontend development to reproduce. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 20:08
  • Regarding the edit: do you need to be a subject expert matter to verify if provided code snippet is a cpu hog? SO is already a place where users are somewhat subject experts: they're programmers. For example, here (stackoverflow.com/a/26453440/1872046) it was easy to communicate to at least 8 people this is not a proper answer to the question. In case the wrongness is so intricate that queue jury actually lack expert knowledge to support or deny it, probably it's just not such a big issue, and certainly not the majority of cases when the answer is blatantly wrong. Commented Aug 19, 2022 at 20:30
  • then it's just possible your assessment of it isn't right - yes, or, the assessment is right and people keep massively upvoting a totally wrong answer for whatever reason. I have seen that already.
    – MrUpsidown
    Commented May 29 at 11:30

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