My idea is a kind of "pre-flight checklist", where new users are given some boxes to tick consciously.. It would be designed to help make sure the first interactive way in which people engage moderation is simple--hopefully at least somewhat lighthearted--and clearly automated.
You might object that "Given so many visible (and invisible) rules, how could you decide which ones to put in the list? It would be hundreds of items long." Well that is pointing to the problem I'm concerned about; rule-creep and bewildered newbies who are scared off easily. But the concern also points directly to what is usually the best solution to most of life's difficulties... use magic.
After all: magic already powers things like the vote-based advertising for open source ad rotation frequency (cough, cough, shamelessplugforRed, readaboutit, cough).
If you don't like my questions, ignore their body text. They are biased to me wanting to speak truth to power--or something--but point is no one person would produce the list of candidates being juggled:
Congratulations, you're almost done posting!
But we really don't want you to have a bad first experience, getting downvoted and griped at by mean old moderators. So since you're new, our automated system has used magic to choose three pre-flight questions for you:
[ ] By clicking this box...I swear I am NOT going off to lunch or take a power nap. I am going to stay more-or-less glued to the keyboard for about an hour, so I can respond to requests people have for clarification.
[ ] I've read over my questyin and am sure it doesn't contian speling erors which may lead to people looking unfavorably upon it.
[ ] I acknowledge that points on StackOverflow are Fake Internet Points (tm), and not legally exchangable as currency. So if I get downvoted I will not take it personally as nothing of value was lost, and instead look over my question again and try to think of how it might be improved.
You can go back to review your post with
[link]
, or by checking the boxes you show you understand. Then you can post!
So to summarize:
Crowdsource list items. Give a kind of template on their length and what markup is usable, limit to one link opened in its own window...etc. Encourage people to think about the wording and tune it.
new item expanding on idea from @Kendra - to avoid "robo-ticking", in the crowdsourced questions list provide a notation for indicating that there's a twist in the question suggesting it should not be checked. The notation would be an instruction to the checklist generator, and not be displayed. This would enable the voting and metrics to be able to account for the "reasonability" of the twist, as with any other checklist item attribute. Off-the-cuff example: "(dontcheck)I've read the how to ask page all the way through, and confirm my promise to have read carefully by not checking this box."
As with open source advertising, if any pre-flight checklist question breaks a certain score then give it a shot into rotation. Use executive authority to axe ones that are popular but shouldn't be.
Shuffle the questions based on percentage of overall points given to all list items. But metrically analyze if there's any strong correlation between hints that are generating noticeable differences in "more upvotes, less close votes".
In the open-source ad rotations, a new top-level post is started fresh after a period of time. With this, there should probably just be one list...but metrically ineffectual ideas that show no correlation with reduced downvotes/closevotes on questions they screened could be deleted (or have votes reset to 0) after a sufficient trial period.
Beyond the metric of "how well did the post perform with given pre-flight questions list", track also whether people went back to review their post (or if the post is still shown on the same page, how long they took between original submission and pressing the second submit)
Also, I'll mention that somewhere it should be possible to click through to the "master post" of all the preflight questions. So any asker who did find cause-to-pause could see them ordered by votes, and ponder any debate about them being had in comments. For instance, the draft text above would perhaps link "pre-flight questions" to the master list post.
:P