My intentions have been leaning towards "gaining reputation points" more than "help people" recently.
I still have intentions to help, but my urge to gain more reputation points has been outweighing my urge to help. These actions include:
- Answering duplicates before they are marked duplicate, giving answers that are specific to the question being asked, albeit the "broader" answer in another post explains the situation pretty well.
- Answering questions that lack detail, then editing my answer as details are gained (rather than asking the asker to include more details, confirming the problem, before answering)
- Advertising my previous answers by slightly manipulating the subject at hand to make my advertised answer seem relevant, while understanding that the advertised answer may not be of any use to the OP (in hopes that bored wanderers will find it interesting)
- Boosting older posts by editing them, allowing them to appear on the first page of "active" in hopes of gaining more attention/reputation. Although the edits are justified (includes more, relevant details), the intention for editing is "game" related.
- Asking questions I already know the answer to, but have yet to seen them anywhere on the site solely to gain reputation, knowing that there is a "community wiki" option.
- ...[Insert "rep-aholic" action here]...
You get the idea:
I (try to) stay within the rules of the site. But I'm not focusing on the primary purpose of the site: Build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.
Instead, I focus on gaining badges/reputation to gain privileges. Although I still help developers, I'm not helping the site itself by working towards keeping it clean.
Some reasons why I think I may have gamified Stack Overflow:
- Reputation seems a lot harder to come by without taking "the extra step", due to many questions in the language I favor already being answered, thus making privileges harder to unlock
- I see others doing it (conformity)
- I currently lack privileges I desire
- Gamification seems to be my best form of motivation towards bringing myself to contribute (rather than taking the "Well someone else will most likely/is bound to do it" route), since a reachable goal with an end in sight is created as soon as I start gamifying, as opposed to the somewhat overwhelming, opinion-based and never-ending goal of "A well documented Q&A site"
- No one has actually asked me to stop
- I feel the competitive nature when gaming leads me to write higher quality posts
I want to stop, but I know it would strongly impact my usage of the site, to the point where I find myself constantly flagging posts (mostly for duplicates) rather than helping a developer get from point A to point B.
I came here to help developers with their programming problems, not teach people how to write well-received posts.
I know there are others out there who gamify Stack Overflow as well (50k+ reputation points, answering questions they know should be flagged/improved, for the sake of gaining rep), so this is not a rare problem.
Some of the "solutions" I've come up with, each with a description of why it may not have effect:
Find a new language to work with if you feel all the good questions in your favored language have been spent.
- Not everyone is a hobbyist. You may assume "if they have time to gain reputation points on Stack Overflow, they have time to delve into a new language", but that doesn't always apply. Stack Overflow has been implementing systems to allow developers to advertise their accounts to employers - Stack Overflow has been attempting to become a source of credential. Reputation could be a goal to gain moderation privileges, such as re-opening a good question (after it has been updated) that you are interested in.
If (some peoples') competitive nature of gamification leads to a trashy site, all the progress you have now could be lost
- How could we know for sure how many people actually gamify Stack Overflow? For all we know, the ones gamifying the site could be the ones keeping it alive. I find gamification to have quite an impact on how "laid-back" my posts are. I'm more determined to push out wiki-like posts if I feel there is competition, and that I must give a well-formatted answer. There are many answers that get chosen due to publicity from outside viewers, albeit the answer that helped the OP was written in a form easier for the OP to read, rather than being seen as reference material.
Those are the only two things I can think of that'll lead to me no longer gamifying.
I should be helping programmers with code, but instead, I'm moderating with tool restrictions.
I don't mind moderating, as it does help programmers understand concepts like the XY problem, how to express your problems better, how to avoid writing unclear posts, etc... It also contributes towards creating a hearty Q&A site for programmers.
But 90% of my time on Stack Overflow would be moderation if I didn't perform the actions listed at the top of this post. Rather than helping people with programming problems, I feel more like I'm working as an overqualified janitor that's not getting paid.
The worst part is, I'm not given all the tools involved with the job. To gain those tools, I must perform non-moderation tasks such as asking/answering questions. So not only do I feel more like a janitor than a programmer, I feel like a petty janitor that lacks tools. If I'm gonna be a janitor, I'm going to work towards being a handy janitor, in the sense that I have all the tools needed to be the best janitor I can be. This contributes to the intention to "game" to gain reputation points.
Yet I choose to stay.
Stack Overflow is the best of its kind, hands down. It seems to be the most maintained programming Q&A site with the highest quality content. That's why I feel bad for treating it like a game in ways that may reduce the quality.
If I have a question about programming, I'm going to want to ask it here. I also want to be respected when I do so.
For example, this question. As soon as it was asked, it received some pretty bad feedback. It had -2 and 4 close votes at the time. Eventually, it started gaining some better feedback, but you can still see the damage in the comments, up until a user mentioned:
I think that if this question was asked by a higher rep user, it would have no close votes or downvotes and many more upvotes.
Which was proven by a question asked by the same guy who made the quoted statement. The user with low reputation was shunned for using reflection and questioning his program's strange results. The user with high reputation did the same exact thing, except he didn't receive any negative feedback. It's pretty apparent why I'd want higher reputation when it comes to getting a problem of mine solved.
So why would anyone stop?
Well, it does have the potential of littering the site. But we are willing to use vehicles and tools that pollute our air. We are willing to build cities that destroy the homes and migration paths of wildlife. There are TONS of selfish actions we humans do primarily for our own selfish benefit, so unless I somehow force myself to become the Stack Overflow version of a "tree hugger", what would be the reason to stop? In my eyes, I'm simply one of many others on this site, so my mind travels towards the same questions people ask in the real world: "How much damage could I really be doing? If I stopped, would it make any difference, seeing how everyone else is still doing it?" and other similar questions.
There's a post asking for suggestions on anti-gamification techniques that should be implemented, but that doesn't help me right now.
I haven't always gamified Stack Overflow, and even in recent times I haven't done much of it, but I can feel the tendency rising. I'm guessing it's due to the 5k reputation gap between privileges that I have encountered since I haven't had this feeling up until that point.
What should someone who gamifies Stack Overflow do in the very near future (don't have to wait for an update) to stop gamifying while still staying active in the programming aspect of the community (not the moderation side)?