Discussions are now available within the following collectives:
Today (August 21, 2023), Stack Overflow is launching an experiment with a new subjective content type. Discussions is a space for threaded conversations where users engage in deeper dialogue and share perspectives on technical topics. As with other new content types like Collections, this experiment takes place within Collectives. The initial launch is within the NLP Collective. Below are some details about how the feature works and general notes about the experiment.
Goals and long-term vision
Discussions provide a complementary technical discussion space on the platform. The discussers of today may become the askers and answerers of tomorrow. Conversely, longtime members of the Stack Overflow community whose Q&A contributions may have declined may find a new outlet in Discussions. By expanding the range of contribution options and ways users can seek knowledge, we expand the sustainability of the community.
This companion post from the Stack Overflow research and design teams takes a deeper dive into the user research behind Discussions, and also goes into how the initial guidelines were developed.
As many of you know, Stack Overflow has mainly focused on objective content: questions that can clearly and definitely be answered. Discussions aims to expand upon this with subjective content.
Discussion threads may not have a specific conclusion with an answer that’s right or wrong. Instead, participants can discuss, debate, and explore varying opinions, perspectives, and implementation strategies in order to make more informed technical decisions.
We expect some Discussion threads to only be relevant for a finite duration in time, while others will become long-lasting points of reference. Our goal is for these conversations can be easily accessible and discoverable in both the short and long term.
Feature details
The format is a threaded conversation with an initial post and then replies. One additional level of nested replies are possible; in other words, a reply to a reply can begin a sub-thread. Discussions replies use mini-Markdown, with support for line breaks and list formatting.
Members of a collective can create new Discussions and any registered user can reply to existing Discussions, regardless of reputation. Discussions posts and replies will be visible in a user’s history.
Voting is available on posts and replies, though the votes are not connected to reputation, which is made clear in a sidebar module. Discussions votes are a new type of vote in the database, and they do not count toward the daily vote limit.
Notifications are limited at this time, only going to the original poster and to authors of replies that receive their own direct replies.
Moderation
For this experiment, we’ve built the moderation functionality in a self-contained way within the Discussions feature. Any user with the flagging privilege can flag a Discussions post.
Community Managers will moderate the space. While Stack Overflow moderators will have access to all moderation capabilities in Discussions, there is no expectation for moderator oversight of this new content type. Moderators can take any action on users or content that they feel is necessary; Code of Conduct violations are not viewed any differently for Discussions. A collective’s Recognized Members do not have moderation capabilities in Discussions.
Guidelines
A set of guidelines are in place to keep the conversation focused on relevant technical topics. This initial set of guidelines has been developed based on research with users of varying levels of experience. The guidelines are also part of the experiment, and feedback on these guidelines is encouraged. As we continue refining and developing Discussions, we’ll work together with the community to iterate on guidelines, and the process will be informed by what we learned in the experimental phase.
Looking ahead
After this initial launch within the NLP Collective, at least one additional collective will have the Discussions feature enabled within a few weeks. We will communicate further details about the next Discussions launch as an update to this post.
This experiment is associated with Collectives because it is the current environment for building subcommunities on Stack Overflow. Collectives provide the proper context for the experiment – focus on specific topics – in a somewhat contained space.
The primary objective of the experiment is to see who’s interested in participating and how they end up using the feature. We’ll be looking at both quality and quantity, assessing retention and the effort required to manage the space effectively. A future version of Discussions could potentially look and operate differently based on learnings, feedback and ideas from the community.
Let us know
- Do you see Discussions being valuable to you?
- How do you think it will impact your experience on Stack Overflow?
- What other Collectives would you like to see Discussions launch in?
- What would you like to talk about with other users in Discussions?
For those interested in further details about the research behind Discussions, see The user research behind Discussions.
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Sub-Domain / Sub-Meta Site...? Those semi-fake Announcements on 'SO-Meta' about "Collectives" nobody cares about are slowly getting annoying...