Wandering about the Internet, I stumbled across why online communities decay over time. This is a rather good article and should be read in conjunction with a group is its own worst enemy. I strongly advise people to read both of these articles — they will give appropriate background for some of the stresses the community of SO is facing.
The Decay Over Time article looks at the relationship between the size of the user base of a site and its quality (in particular YouTube and various Reddits). A key point that it emphasizes again and again is that if you do not expect to interact with someone again in the future, chances are you will be more selfish than kind (a one-off prisoner's dilemma vs an iterated version).
This has multiple repercussions.
- When there is someone asking a question and you do not expect them to come back, you are less likely to help them. (I was reminded that this was partly signaled in the past by the accept rate being public information, though that had its own set of issues.)
- The larger the community, the less likely any two people are going to interact again, the less kind they are to each other (see also: any number of meta posts about being kind to newbies).
- The less likely someone is to have their contributions seen, the less effort they put into them (e.g. the regex answers).
- The larger the community, the harder it is to get people to help out (/review/close).
- If you see someone (with a name, a gravatar that is distinctive) answer a question again and again, you are more likely to have a favorable opinion on that person. This is why when you see Jon, or Greg, or Eric answer you are expecting to interact with them again and thus more likely to up vote it.
- (related: Four Things to Design For #1 from A Group: The first thing you would design for is handles the user can invest in — user12345657 with a default gravatar is less likely to invest in the quality of the site, and even if I do interact with that individual again in the future, I am less likely to know it).
What does this all mean? It means that SO is fricking huge. As such, it has many big city problems.
What can be done?
- Make it easier to have 'smaller' communities within various tags (Yeah, that's very vague). Somewhere out there, there are various webpages associated with some of these sub-communities. For example the Python community has a page for common duplicates... but it's not here at Stack Overflow.
- Make it harder to ask a question. Add barriers to entry to try to keep keep things from growing too much.
- Make it easier to find old crap — so it can be cleaned up (and clean it up). When people are aware that their minimal size answer in regex will be seen by someone again, there is some added incentive to put more effort into it.
- (Related: Drive by votes on old material help clean up old crap (down votes feed the roomba) and make it clear to people that people do see and interact with the older material and are thus more likely to fix the old content and create better content going forward.)
And after reading all of this, don't forget to read:
- Why Online Communities Decay Over Time
- A Group Is Its Own Worst Enemy
- Aside: Podcast #23 from '08 has Jeff and Joel talking about Clay Shirky — it would be interesting to revisit this as a "6 years later" retrospective.
The less likely someone is to have their contributions seen, the less effort they put into them (e.g. the regex answers).
That is probably true of many of the questions, but that's not my experience of the answers. :)