I think we've all come across incorrect accepted and wildly upvoted answers at some point in our journey.
With its amazing volume of knowledge and experts, Stackoverflow can now afford to cast its attention to cleaning up spills on aisle 9. Yes, we have watchers and watcher-watchers, but not everything gets caught.
I also agree with others that possessing a diamond is not, by itself, a qualifier to judge correctness of content.
The good news is: we already have a mechanism by which the public can assess content and intercept content that is not beneficial to the community -- Review Queues.
For the best chance at fairness which is delivered by a high volume of reasonably qualified assessors, let's add another category to the Moderation Queues that is purely for "gold badgers".
Every time you earn a new gold badge, that new tag qualifies you to review flagged answers with that tag, then vote to Delete, Keep, Edit, or Skip.
Definitely Edit if the answer just needs a little TLC.
A Delete vote MUST be cast with a justification. The justifications will be finite. Just like voting to close, you need to say why for transparency.
For example, you might vote to remove because an edit can not resuscitate the post and:
- the answer does not provide the expected result which is 100% clear in the question
- the answer endorses practices with SEVERE security ramifications which will be detrimental to unknowing researchers
- the answer says that the task is "impossible" and a possible solution is/can be provided
You vote to Keep if:
- The answer provides reasonable accuracy within the scope of the posted question. In other words, it contains enough correctness to stay (again perhaps edit it if slightly undercooked). The goal is to bring SO up, not bring posters down.
If you are worried that purists/extremists will buzzsaw through content and do harm, then add safeguards. Instead of getting a verdict from a handful of voters, make a decision only after there is an overwhelming majority of support one way or the other from the gold badgers -- a determination by a margin of 50 votes (whatever number or percentage). Limit the number of votes you can cast in a time period - like everything else here.
If you are worried that this will scare off new users, then only permit the flagging of answers which are n years or older (e.g. 5).
Or make flagging non-negative answers for deletion cost a reimbursable (if/when the delete was approved) 10 rep points. I know I would cop the -10 if I was confident that I was flagging appropriately.
Even after all that, if you can't trust the community, pass the majority verdict on to moderators for final approval.
Basically, meh answers should be safe from expulsion - we don't want this to be abused. Just keep building safeguards until you can be happy.
Inspired by this topic which focusses on bad content, let's consider rewarding the good content in a similar fashion...
If a question with one or more answers is a good, clear question (shouldn't be closed for any reason) but has been abandoned because the OP:
- has been de-registered (an ownerless question) or
- has not logged in for n years (let's say 5)
then let's investigate if there is a green tick worthy answer and dignify contributors for their effort.
By casting our attention to the poisoned and abandoned pages here, we stand to make real positive change where previously people have merely shrugged their shoulders and said "there's nothing I can do to fix these kinds of messes".
Finally, rather than scrutinizing the half-considered context and rules that I have jotted down, please help to refine these suggestions for the Review Queues. There will be concerns about gamification, collusion, and fringe cases, but those issues are already threats with existing features here, so don't throw the baby out with the bath water. This might even rekindle the SO love from veterans who have become bored from years of doing the same tasks here. Be bold enough to try to make the site even better than it already is. Talk it out!
string
meansSystem.String
. How is the one you linked to "the only correct answer"? I only see 3 or 4 answers on the first page that actually say there is no difference. I do agree, however, that most of the answers are duplicates and can safely be deleted. If you flag such answers for mod attention and specify how they don't provide any new information over the top 2 or 3 answers, you'll likely get good traction (and reference this meta)string
is an alias forglobal::System.String
. Several answers say that, and use that as their justification for saying thatstring
andString
are the same thing. But while the first sentence is true, the consequences of that alias existing result in lots of differences betweenstring
andString
. It's that statement about the differences that result from that alias existing, that make the answers wrong.