Google keeps updating their Panda algorithm. One of its roles is to make 'thin' content websites (or URLs) rank lower in the search results.
Google Panda is a change to Google's search results ranking algorithm that was first released in February 2011. The change aimed to lower the rank of "low-quality sites" or "thin sites", and return higher-quality sites near the top of the search results.
I also read this article about how DaniWeb's traffic performance was over taken by Stack Overflow [src].
Additional sources discussing the penalization of thin content:
Stack Overflow has many notable questions with a lot of great answers, but there are also some questions that have 'thin' content with no or few answers.
How does Stack Overflow manage this nature of user-generated content and prevent Panda penalties? Are they using rel=canonical
tag on duplicate and 'thin' pages?
canonical
link type in these cases, because it’s required that the content is "either duplicative or a superset". If a SO question gets closed as duplicate, the content is typically not identical or a subset. (If OP copies a question, it should be deleted anyway, or edited with correct attribution, in which case it’s, again, not duplicative anymore. Even a single new/different comment or answer would change the duplicative nature.)