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This is something that I've been curious about for a bit, since I don't have any anecdotal evidence to go off of, and maybe one or two cases that come to mind of this happening. But, what are the rough statistics on a user that is question or answer banned, and how often do those same users reverse that ban?

I've always held that it's a vanishingly small number - somewhere on the order of 3% - but if possible, I'd like to see some numbers - at least a ballpark.

Some slices that would be curious to look at:

  • By reputation (north of 200 and up to 5000, if the numbers don't seem to fade into obscurity)
  • If users have been warned, but haven't adjusted to the warnings
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    You might also want to know how often users which are warned about being in dange of getting post-banned improve. Dec 29, 2015 at 22:10
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    Some old data: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/172300/…
    – Shog9
    Dec 29, 2015 at 22:11
  • @Deduplicator: That's not a bad thing either, although I would suspect that, depending on the volume of questions alone (and judging by the sheer number of questions on the site), that the likelihood of a user improving their questions based on getting the warning is probably 1 in 4. Worth knowing, though.
    – Makoto
    Dec 29, 2015 at 22:13
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    This should maybe be part of the bigger "year in review" meta.stackexchange.com/questions/272040/…
    – Braiam
    Dec 29, 2015 at 22:44

1 Answer 1

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I'm not gonna break this down by rep, that's entirely too tedious. But here are some other stats...

In the past 30 days...

  • 460 users have hit the answer block at least once. 39 have gone on to post at least one answer afterwards.
  • 4,448 users have hit the question block at least once. 95 have gone on to post at least one question afterwards.
  • 4,302 users have hit the question quality rate-limiter at least once, and 1,098 have gone on to ask at least one more question.

Context

During this time period, 286,638 answers have been posted by 88,442 users.

During this time period, 242,919 questions have been posted by 144,509 users.

If we assume that no blocked user would ever post more than one answer a day, then the answer blocks and rate-limits have prevented 605 answers from being posted during this period.

If we assume that no blocked user would ever post more than one question a day, then the question blocks and rate-limits have prevented 7,522 questions from being asked during this period.

In the past 365 days...

  • 4,151 users have hit the answer block at least once. 781 have gone on to post at least one more answer, and 63 have then gotten themselves answer-blocked again.
  • 24,994 users have hit the question block at least once. 3,319 have gone on to post at least one more question, and 1,304 have then gotten themselves question-blocked again.
  • 41,873 users have hit the question quality rate-limiter at least once, 23,690 of whom have gone on to ask at least one more question, out of whom 10,145 have gotten rate-limited again, and 3,266 who've gone on to get fully question-blocked.

Warnings in the past 365 days...

  • 6,769 users have been warned about their answer quality at least once, 649 went on to actually get answer-blocked.
  • 95,623 users have been warned about their question quality at least once, 25,067 went on to get question-blocked OR rate-limited.

Context

During this time period, 3,702,862 answers have been posted by 593,358 users.

During this time period, 3,105,000 questions have been posted by 961,474 users.

If we assume that no blocked user would ever post more than one answer a day, then the answer blocks and rate-limits have prevented 7,300 answers from being posted during this period.

If we assume that no blocked user would ever post more than one question a day, then the question blocks and rate-limits have prevented 91,501 questions from being asked during this period. Hey, that's pretty close to 3%...

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    These are the kind of statistics that destroyed the MSDN Forums. Cooked numbers that made everybody feel good and hid all signals that there were very serious problems. At least replace "users" with "accounts" and you can still make it look good without having to deal with the problem. Dec 30, 2015 at 9:23
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    @HansPassant: I'm a little curious: What sort of uncooked numbers would you be looking for, and how would I or someone else tell if we'd gotten those instead? Dec 30, 2015 at 10:21
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    Is there any accounting of users who work around the ban by spinning up a new account? I think perhaps the point @HansPassant is making is that you can't necessarily equate an inactive account with a prevented question/answer, unless you can be certain that the user didn't simply abandon the blocked account and create a new one. Typical Internet problem.
    – aroth
    Dec 30, 2015 at 11:44
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    I'm sorry, @Hans - did you think these numbers were at all impressive? I did include context, after all... I'd hoped you could see from it that they're actually pitifully low. I'm not gonna play semantics or try to suss out cheaters in a population that is at best 10% of the total, even including the newer rate-limiting system. For all the whining here, the sad truth of the q-ban system is that it barely affects anyone.
    – Shog9
    Dec 30, 2015 at 14:37
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    To the extent that we can identify users who do this, @aroth, we stop them from using their new accounts, or hobble their activity in some way. The big fat unknown here though is folks who just create a new account for every question. They never get banned, never get warned... They do get rate-limited, but not nearly as strictly as they should be. We put a lot of work into improving this over the past year or so, but it's been hard to eke out more than incremental gains.
    – Shog9
    Dec 30, 2015 at 14:41
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    @shog9 I can only hope this work you speak of does not involve designing some kind of AI, because it can only end up with it deciding to nuke humanity to be done with it :)
    – Gimby
    Dec 30, 2015 at 17:01
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    With regard to "hit the block at least once and went on to post at least once afterwards", is there a distinction made or recorded between never trying to post again vs. getting blocked and attempting but failing to work out of it?
    – jscs
    Dec 31, 2015 at 9:26
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    I'm curious about the fraction of users that made good posts after a block expired. (i.e. upvoted / accepted answers and questions.) Dec 31, 2015 at 16:19
  • That's not nearly enough bans handed out. Should be harsher. First question is down voted and closed? You are banned.
    – JK.
    Jul 3, 2016 at 23:14

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