I think it is poor form to outright tell a community that they are treating new users poorly without first posing the question "Is the community treating new users poorly?" and then letting the community voice it's point of view.
Self-policing and self-judgment can only take you so far, though. We think we're good and doing the right thing and that it's everyone else that's hostile towards us.
Easy enough to fall in that trap.
So uh, should we ask ourselves how we're doing? We're probably going to think that this is some kind of hoax or some sort of nonsense or weird statistic and move on with our day and completely miss the message that is trying to be conveyed.
I've had some thoughts brewing on this for a while now - ever since I (very) rudely told someone off of the platform - and ever since someone else had posted a Tweet in regards to them wanting to leave the platform. With not much else on my plate I might actually have a shot at compressing that into some kind of coherent post in a few days.
Let's start with the community. We genuinely feel like we get a negative rap since all we want to do is be sure that we can understand you. Problem is...that "help me understand you" comes across in all kinds of forms.
- Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable Example ("MCVE")
- "What is the problem?"
- "Why'd you do it like this?"
- "What is your actual question?"
Granted, some of these things are valid concerns and have valid places in a Q&A site like this. Many of these things are blindly misused on a minute-by-minute basis in that we often lose the true purpose behind these words. Take "MCVE" for example. That's effectively duckspeak for "show me your code, the error and the data you're feeding it." Problem is, it's still duckspeak - we fall into the trap of demanding MCVEs on questions that may not even warrant it that we're unwittingly and unknowingly pushing away askers by exacting impossible standards upon them.
Now, I did say that those above were valid concerns, and MCVE is no exception. But this is the reason that talking about things like politeness and rudeness should happen; we don't really know if we're being rude or not when we ask for those things, and we can't really accept that we actually might be.
Another thing that is very troubling is the fact that, as of this moment, the comments section of the blog post is disabled. That doesn't foster discussion. How can I tell you how I feel either way if you aren't willing to open a channel of communication?
How would you like to moderate that?
You've gotta delete both extreme views; the people who call us "jerks", "snobs", and all other manner of foul things, as well as the people who call others "rep whores", "help vampires", and all other manner of foul things.
Then you have to actually filter the signal from the other noise. The noise of "yes, I agree" or "no, I disagree" doesn't actually motivate a solution. It doesn't say or describe anything about self-reflection. It doesn't even begin to broach what the problem (or problems) are.
Of the handful of responses that you'd get which do do that, they're buried so deep in the noise that it's impossible for their message to actually reach a broader audience.
For that, let's just leverage Meta.