91

The situation

Today I saw another one in the slew and endless torrent of meta questions about "why have I been question banned?". As usual, it was closed as a duplicate of this FAQ entry.

Standard fare for a Tuesday morning on meta.SO.

Out of curiosity, I decided to check up on it again, as it's been a long time since I've read it. What I found was a little disconcerting.

As I understand it, the purpose and goal of this FAQ entry is to give question banned users the information they need to unban themselves. This post is heavily referenced whenever the topic of a question ban comes up and is viewed by many-a-user who would like their posting privileges back.

I think, to that end, that it doesn't serve its purpose very well.

The introduction

Right away, it starts off with this:

Why am I getting this message?

As stated in the about links on every page, Stack Exchange is a network of question and answer sites, not help forums. This implies that all posts are expected to have value for later visitors, in addition to helping the asker. To enforce that, and to prevent help vampires from making the answerers turn away from the community, low-quality questions and answers are blocked. This includes posts from:

  • users who can't be bothered to form sentences
  • users who don't do the most basic kinds of research themselves
  • users who barely even explain what it is they are trying to do

Now, this is pretty confrontational. It may be earned (the user did earn their ban after all), but it's likely not going to effect behavior change. This post is making an argument to the user about the expectations this site has of them, referring to "Help Vampires" and "users who can't be bothered to form sentences" or "users who don't do the most basic kinds of research themselves" or "users who barely even explain what it is they are trying to do" can serve to put readers on the defensive "I'm not that bad, surely!" and cause them to fail to consider what we need them to understand to get unbanned.

I think these points are all needlessly confrontative.

Suggested Edits

First off, I think the blip about help vampires is unuseful and not really needed anymore. Any behavior that would fall under "Help Vampire" is covered in another point of the list already - duplicating the meaning in a catchphrase that can come across as insulting is unnecessary

Secondly, I think the bullet points could use reworking to be less dismissive and confrontative.

Something like:

This includes posts from:

  • users who insufficiently describe their question or don't take enough time to properly formulate.
  • users who don't do enough research of their own before asking
  • users who don't provide enough detail for their question to be answerable

Again, the goal of the post (to my understanding) isn't to let the banned user know just how crap they are at asking questions but to effect change in behavior. To that end, it serves better to be friendly but direct rather than dismissive.

Further ideas

I also think that it might be of use to reorder the structure of the FAQ - helpful tidbits like where to find your deleted posts or over the nature of the question ban should come after the paragraph on how to get out of it.

27
  • 2
    Probably a stupid question but can't you edit the FAQ yourself? It is a community wiki. May 22, 2018 at 8:57
  • 8
    @AndréKool It's locked and can't be edited by non-mods.
    – Erik A
    May 22, 2018 at 8:58
  • 40
    Even if I could edit it myself, editing substantial amounts of a FAQ post isn't something I'd just go ahead and do on my own judgement. I think a community consensus or at least support is necessary for such a change.
    – Magisch
    May 22, 2018 at 8:59
  • 27
    The banned users have already ignored the rules, policy, tour and warning emails. The chances of a change in an advice post affecting their behaviour is zer.... minimal. That said, I would not oppose a chage in the 'tone' of the advice, It will have next-to-no effect on the banned users, but it might make the site look less unwelcoming, and does not ask for more work from anybody on a reguar basis. It's a NOP - if users want it changed, change it. May 22, 2018 at 9:10
  • 1
    "include" doens't imply "limited to"...
    – user202729
    May 22, 2018 at 9:55
  • 8
    @MartinJames Even if the chances are minimal, shouldn't we at least make an effort? If we think such users are beyond help, why have time-limited question bans at all? We could simply ban them forever, if we thought they can't change anyways.
    – Polygnome
    May 22, 2018 at 10:15
  • 3
    It is worth noting that MSE has the same FAQ and uses the same wording: meta.stackexchange.com/a/86998/158100
    – rene
    May 22, 2018 at 10:25
  • 6
    @Polygnome: I think that hits on the core of the problem. Should we make an effort? Probably. Would we have done seven years ago? Probably. Is everyone a bit tired of "making an effort" multiple times a day for people repeatedly showing the same lack of concern for anyone else? Meh, yep. As a result I'm detecting general fatigue around the community (hence the 'welcoming' post, which ironically just made it all worse) and I don't know whether there's a solution for that, or even whether there's a real problem there. The site is experiencing the problems any community does at scale. May 22, 2018 at 10:52
  • 9
    @LightnessRacesinOrbit I think its understandable that community members are exhausted and frustrated... and expecting everyone to always be super-polite in every single comment is unrealistic. But in highly-visible, often linked to FAQ entries, I think we should make an effort to be as neutral, non-belittling as possible.
    – Polygnome
    May 22, 2018 at 11:04
  • 3
    @Polygnome: For what it's worth I do agree with that. There doesn't seem to be any need for such confrontational language in "official documents", on that I think we can probably all agree. May 22, 2018 at 11:08
  • 4
    @Dukeling: I do think there are arguments to be firm at the outset, but the specific language quoted here seems way OTT. I think someone wrote it while angry/fed up/drunk ^_^ May 22, 2018 at 13:06
  • 1
    @Polygnome The main reason that they aren't banned forever (they used to be) is because when they are they're incentivised to just make a new account.
    – Servy
    May 22, 2018 at 14:06
  • 1
    You should also add "Users who are the victim of close voters who don't properly understand the close system, or who willingly abuse the close system." to the list. That seems to be happening more and more nowadays.
    – user4639281
    May 22, 2018 at 17:19
  • 4
    @MartinJames by willingly using a close reason erroneously to close a question you know does not qualify for the given close reason. I have heard this justified as "well the question needs to be closed but none of the reasons fit..." which is a nonsensical statement in and of itself.
    – user4639281
    May 22, 2018 at 21:00
  • 2
    @TinyGiant oh, I see. OK, well I admit to tossing a coin between 'Unclear' and 'Too broad' myself sometimes, especially with a mega-dupe h/w dump question where finding and linking the dupe would take more time than the OP spent on 'composing', (copypasta). and posting the question. May 23, 2018 at 7:00

3 Answers 3

24

I agree that the FAQ is not good. But I don't think it's because it's bad at changing behavior. It's bad because it promises something that we are not very well equipped to deliver:

Redemption.

In essence, the FAQ says "do these things and your ban may go away". But that's just not true. How often do people actually reverse their question bans?

Most bad questions won't be reviewed/upvoted without support from MSO. Many of them may have already been Roomba'd. And we as a community are far more focused on dealing with new questions than old ones that were not asked well to begin with. And rightfully so.

So even if we manage to change a user's behavior, that behavioral change is unlikely to pay off. Sometimes it does, but I rather suspect that more often than not, it doesn't.

And if it doesn't pay off, then the FAQ isn't useful at changing behavior, since there is no reinforcement. We ask the user to go through and fix their posts, but it's not enough to actually help them.

So I would say that, while improving the FAQ may be good, without supporting infrastructure that allows the user to more effectively gain redemption, the FAQ will be meaningless.

Right now, we're in a half-state. Our FAQ tells people that they can get the ban lifted, but the reality is that they probably can't.

Which I suppose leads to an unpleasant question: do we really want to offer people redemption? Or rather, do we want to pay the costs of providing a viable path to redemption?

The kind of infrastructure needed to provide a real way to achieve redemption would be onerous. The most effective one is one that we would enjoy the least: informing voters on a question when it has been edited. That would discourage voting on questions at all, just to avoid the noise of someone trying to fix their post.

Other alternatives would be a special banned-user review queue. But do we really want to spend time looking at edits to questions specifically from banned users?

Whatever the changes are, it would require further investment of time by us on such users. Is that something we want? Is that something such users deserve?

After all, question bans are not easy to get. You have to violate our community standards multiple times. You have to ask several poor questions. On the way to being question banned, users will be informed (as I understand it) that their questions are not of high quality and they should improve things. Yet they persist.

How much time and effort should the community and Stack Overflow themselves spend on such users? And without spending that time and effort, the FAQ is essentially just a fig leaf: the promise of redemption without any substantive follow-through.

26
  • 6
    But it is worth mentioning that the whole idea of the question ban is that it's very much expected that most people who reach it will stay there. Redemption is designed to be possible, for those rare cases where someone either makes the determined effort to change, or where someone just has a few unusually bad posts before they figure things out, but it's certainly not expected that a large percentage of users will get out of the ban (if that were to happen it would be a sign that people were being banned when they shouldn't be, as they're clearly capable users).
    – Servy
    May 22, 2018 at 16:06
  • 4
    With incorrect closures and abuse of the closure system being rampant nowadays, I don't think we should be so quick to throw away these users without any chance for appeal.
    – user4639281
    May 22, 2018 at 17:23
  • 10
    @TinyGiant: They had the chance for appeal. Many, many times in the past. Again, you don't get a ban for a single question; it requires repeated behavior. Also, I don't know anything about incorrect closures or rampant abuse of the system. Do you have any statistics to back that up with? May 22, 2018 at 17:45
  • 11
    @TinyGiant Citation needed. That's not the sort of statement you can make without backing it up.
    – fbueckert
    May 22, 2018 at 18:37
  • 6
    I see how-to questions being closed with the no-mcve or no-repro (that doesn't make sense at all but whatever) etc all the time. This is not a new problem, people have been erroneously closing questions for a long time and if you ask questions repeatedly in tags where these erroneous closers hang out regularly then you're likely to have your question erroneously closed more than once. Hell before I stopped answering questions I found most of the reasonable questions I wanted to answer in the close vote queue. A large portion of the reasonable on-topic questions I have answered are closed.
    – user4639281
    May 22, 2018 at 20:58
  • 7
    The main reason I stopped answering questions was because I was seeing reasonable on-topic questions erroneously closed so regularly that it felt like I was performing a sisyphean task in trying to prevent all these closures and get these posts reopened, and that if I continued I would probably spontaneously combust due to the extreme level of frustration that it caused. A great many people use the closure system correctly, but there is also a great many people who use the closure system incorrectly either on purpose or because they just don't know any better.
    – user4639281
    May 22, 2018 at 21:04
  • 2
    @TinyGiant Alright, so let's see some links. If this is such a common occurrence, you should have no issue providing evidence to that effect.
    – fbueckert
    May 22, 2018 at 21:17
  • 2
    @fbueckert sure, go through my most recent answers and count how many of the questions are closed. I can assure you none of them should be. Honestly I'm done trying to fix a problem that no one else wants to even acknowledge exists, I just came here to again point out that everyone is fallible and we need to not assume that every person ever banned was legitimately banned. Every system has false positives and bad apples. Denying the existence of such things does no good and only prevents us from having an honest and real conversation.
    – user4639281
    May 22, 2018 at 21:37
  • 6
    @TinyGiant: "Denying the existence of such things does no good and only prevents us from having an honest and real conversation." I just looked through the 10 most recent answers in your profile. Not one was closed. I'm not going to spend any more time on a problem that you refuse to substantiate. This is not "denial"; it's "you haven't made a case that this is sufficiently common to be a problem. May 22, 2018 at 21:42
  • 3
    Whatever, I just wanted to bring some honesty to the discussion but obviously no one here wants that. Everyone wants to believe that we are all perfect and infallible. I leave you with your denial.
    – user4639281
    May 22, 2018 at 21:47
  • 8
    @TinyGiant: You've brought no honesty to this discussion. You've injected an unsupported accusation into the middle of it. And just because we don't accept your notion that close vote misuse is widespread does not mean we believe that "we are all perfect and infallible". Your hyperbole is not helping your case at all. Really, if you're not going to substantiate your claims, just don't make them. It would save everyone a lot of time and effort. May 22, 2018 at 21:50
  • 3
    @NicolBolas I can't comment on how frequent they are, but wrongful closures are definitely not unheard of. May 22, 2018 at 21:56
  • 3
    @NicolBolas I think the overall point is that mistakes do happen. Questions are wrongfully closed and could contribute to someones question ban. It only takes two bad questions for a new user to get question banned and if one of those was closed incorrectly that user is given no chance to improve. If possible, Stack Overflow shouldn't be giving up and turning its back on people. We want people contributing to this site. Permanently banning people from doing so should only be an option if it is abundantly clear that they will not improve. May 22, 2018 at 22:13
  • 2
    @IncreasinglyIdiotic: Bans aren't permanent anymore; you can ask (or answer) a question once every six months. Not ideal, but not permanent, either.
    – Makoto
    May 22, 2018 at 22:17
  • 3
    While I think this answer raises a valid issue underlying the original question, in either case (redemption/permadeath) no need to be jerks about it, people (including possibly me!) were probably already jerks to them in the process of them asking the questions that got them banned. May 23, 2018 at 12:09
16

The purpose of the FAQ is... To answer a set of frequently-asked questions.

I know you already knew that, but please let's be explicit about it. We need the FAQ because these are frequently-asked questions, not because there's a lot of hope of rescuing banned users. After all, most of the information there is already in the help center, and the user is given a link directly to it upon encountering the ban - if that didn't help, then neither will the FAQ.

As it happens, I (and several other people on my team) have years of experience doing what you propose the FAQ should do: giving authors the information they need to get out of the ban. And here's what I learned doing that:

  1. very, very, very, very few people want the information they need to get unbanned. The vast majority of folks hitting the ban never even ask for it; the rest mostly just want the ban lifted.

  2. Even fewer want to put real work into it, so if the relevant information happens to be "edit the last 5 questions you posted to where they're clear and findable by others interested in the topics" they probably won't. Even if you give them links to those questions. Even if you write exemplary titles for the questions you're linking to.

  3. Sometimes the ban is legitimately inappropriate. Not very often, but... Sometimes someone just got unlucky. Really unlucky. We've made an awful lot of changes to how bans work over the years, and this has become a vanishingly-rare occurrence... But it's not completely outside the realm of possibility, and in these cases no amount of information is going to help.

  4. There's a secret trick for getting people unbanned, known only to Stack Exchange support staff. Ha, just kidding; it's known to everyone, it's just too obvious for most folks to believe. The trick is: if you go through their profile and find a couple of half-way decent questions, edit them to be... let's say 90% decent... and then upvote them... The ban will be lifted in most cases. Of course, the real trick there is finding a couple of half-way decent questions.

  5. did I mention how nobody wants to hear about editing their own questions? Nobody wants to hear about editing their own questions. Or actually do it. Much less do it well. Seriously, it's not even worth discussing fancy review queues or the like; if you come across a q-banned user you want to help, just edit their questions for them and then toss a few votes at 'em. We already have one review queue predicated on author-edits, and it's mostly a waste of time - if you want it to happen, do it yourself.

All that said... There's no harm in polishing up a FAQ. The answer is currently locked due to excessive comments, but feel free to write up your own version (in a new question or even an answer to this one) and - if folks like what you wrote - flag it for moderator attention; they can edit it into the FAQ or even just temporarily unlock it so that you can do it yourself.

6
  • Some (likely not insignificant) chunk of the people in this situation have had all of their posts deleted, so point 4/5 isn't an option for users who'd like to try and help - since only mods can see deleted posts by a specific user. I suppose that, if they're in that situation, it's unlikely that they'll ever get unbanned and many of them are likely falling into points 1, 2 and 5. Are these users beyond helping, then? They can at least now come to Meta to ask for specific help if they know to link to their questions, though I'm not sure how well such questions are received here.
    – Catija
    May 24, 2018 at 3:23
  • 9
    "if you go through their profile and find a couple of half-way decent questions, edit them to be... let's say 90% decent... and then upvote them—" S E R I A L U P V O T I N G D E T E C T E D
    – BoltClock
    May 24, 2018 at 3:59
  • 2
    Discussed further here @BoltClock
    – Shog9
    May 24, 2018 at 4:07
  • Of course. I never said it was either legit or not :P
    – BoltClock
    May 24, 2018 at 4:10
  • 4
    This is a common misconception, @Catija. Of the 13689 users to encounter a comprehensive ban on Stack Overflow over the past 90 days, only 3677 - about 27% - had even half of their questions deleted. And speaking of 27... That's the precise number of users to hit the q-ban with all of their questions deleted in the same time period. See the bullet above about really unlucky users...
    – Shog9
    May 24, 2018 at 4:11
  • @BoltClock Shog is right in that adding edits into the mix makes reversal check much more lenient, I tested that myself a few years ago. I think this way can pass up to 5-6 posts in the row, especially if you interleave votes with edits (as opposed to "batching"). Another trick is to find a post to vote in opposite direction (shouldn't be hard to find DV-worthy post of a q-banned user), if memory serves this way let me do 8 or 9 "serial" upvotes in a day. Speaking of ban, that many votes almost certainly would push the user out of it
    – gnat
    May 24, 2018 at 7:24
12

I think that editing the qbanned faq is a good idea. I am not quite as concerned about the help vampire bit so much, kind of on the fence there.

What I would like to see changed though is the layout of the qbanned answer on the faq page. A very large chunk of the answer is describing how the user got there. They are probably aware that their questions were not going well, there is no need to break out a list of all possible things they did wrong and then iterate it with the suggestion that they touched on all of them, even if they did. It just isn't constructive.

Instead of showing how they got there, it would be more constructive to show where they can go now. There is a lot of guidance for where they can go now, but it is at the bottom of the post, and tl;dr; definitely applies here. For users who did not read rules or abide by guidance, it is a little silly to expect them to read all the way to the end of the qban answer.

tl;dr;

Edit the qban answer to show what actions they can take right at the beginning, and leave the part describing what they did to get there at the end.

2
  • 4
    Sounds good to me. Most useful info at start, sure:) Was probably written the other way up because of timeline: User posts bad questions > user gets banned for it > user has to take remedial action. Action first, reason for it afterwards seems non-intuitive, even if a better plan overall. May 22, 2018 at 20:13
  • 2
    Forcing users to read a whole wall of text is a feature, not a bug. The question asks how to change behavior of "Users who did not read rules or abide by guidance" -- catering to their bad behavior will not produce the desired change.
    – Ben Voigt
    May 24, 2018 at 5:26

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .