The first thing they teach you in art school is how to take and give criticism as a professional.
Criticism is not just a statement to the contrary, it also must contain a reason for the criticism and must be accompanied a proposed alternative solution.
Before leaving a comment basically stating. You are wrong! and nothing else, think about how productive that is in the whole. Without the proposed alternative, it is nothing more than a verbose -1
. Think about how that proves my point about the comment system.
Downvotes on meta mean "I disagree". Why post a comment that basically states "I disagree and some generic negative comment" and nothing else, is illustrating the point and just providing objective data to back up subjective feedback. Why not just down vote and move on, that is the current community mantra and party line.
For the uninitiated that is almost just as unwelcoming, at least they do not see a comment that they can internalize a some kind of abuse directed as them personally. It is not a solution, that much is clear.
On the main site, the down votes have real consequences and the comments are taken as criticism, with no positive alternative solution proposed.
Problem: Comments
The presumption of the argument is based on comments are the root cause as evidences in every case cited that people are complaining about.
So comments no matter how neutral are causing feelings of unwelcoming and no comments are considered just as unwelcoming. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
I make no assertion that any of these feelings is legitimate. That is impossible because feelings are subjective. Jay Hanlon is the one that made the erroneous jump to:
"When someone tells you how they feel, you can pack up your magnifying glass and clue kit, cuz that’s the answer. You’re done. And a lot of devs feel like Stack Overflow is an intimidating, unwelcoming place. We know because they tell us. I am doing nothing but proposing something to try and change what he thinks is wrong."
The current comment system is the majority source of the feelings because of two polcies that exacerbate the inference and amplify things perceptions that are not there or completely unintended.
comments are not for conversation: that means they are terse, one liners and people are loath to respond to lines of questioning to avoid conversing. Which typically devolves into arguing because of the terse one liners.
vote and move one: this community policy is recommended because of the first problem. It causes its own problems and exacerbates the first one. No follow ups on down votes, close votes, etc. No comments are just as problematic for new community members as terse comments with no follow up.
So we should just remove the ability to comment. That much has been expressed in the past ( which I actually disagree with that proposal, it does not go far enough and is what prompted this post ) and tries to address the root cause of most of the problems that Jay Hanlon's blog post tries to make a point about but gets lost in the clumsy way he blames the volunteer community members that contribute the content to the site that makes it what it is and also whatever financial commercial success it may have.
This is my attempt to address the problem, nothing more.
The in these cases where comments are taken as offense almost always have devolved into a back and forth between one or more people. Which just exacerbated it the problem. Someone feels like they are being ganged up on or ignore at some point.
It is a damned if you do damned if you don't situation, has been for the at least last five years, from my experience.
Chat rooms get suggested by some heuristic now, usually long after it should have been taken to chat and everyone is pissed and wants nothing to do with any more communication.
Solution: Chat
By definition comments are not for conversation and they are about the worst way to hold one if conversation was allowed in them.
By definition chat is for conversation and real time interaction, which would go a long ways to changing the unwelcoming perception that the no conversation in comments commenting system evokes now.
This by no means completely removes the problem that some people are just going to be assholes no matter what, it just removes some of unintended perception that people that are not intentionally being an asshole to a form of communication that is more suited to conversation instead of tossing terse one liners over a fence.
The logical conclusion is that the ability to leave comments be removed.
I suggest that that every question gets a chat
room instead.
You could make the OP the room owner and moderation would be from the community members with badges in the tags of the question.
Lock the chat room when an answer is accepted or abandoned for some period of time. Make it vote to reopen or something, with previous participants getting higher weighted votes, or flagged for moderation just like comments would have been.
Delete the room when the question is roomba'd, delete voted, has no activity for a period of time or by a moderator just like comments would have been.
The technology is there, refactor it where it will scale to this requirement.