218

This answer has been deleted as of yesterday. Similar to Jon Skeet's Stack Overflow question checklist, this answer has been used by many users as a go-to link to comment when a question with no research or effort is asked.

I'm removing this answer because it's not advice we want to give to new users - Tim Post

IMO, this answer is applicable to everyone, especially new users. If the hyperbole is confusing, it could be edited out and it would still be a solid answer. I don't understand why it has to be deleted.

Here's a screenshot of the answer:

enter image description here

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  • 93
    Wow, another relic of Stack Overflow bites the dust. Jun 28, 2019 at 7:12
  • 82
    This is pretty bad. I've often linked to that answer in discussions (mostly to illustrate that people shouldn't say things like googled a bit or skimmed the docs). Now all those links are dead, and refer to the second-best answer which has a different gist...
    – Erik A
    Jun 28, 2019 at 7:13
  • 29
    Also, I think that the people who upvoted the answer (or really, anyone) get that the point is not that you should go out, buy and read books before asking on SO. It's a hyperbole, and the point is you should put in the maximum amount of research effort that's feasible for you before asking. It explains that too: The important point remains that we absolutely want you to do your homework. Understand that our time is not free, though we do not charge for it.
    – Erik A
    Jun 28, 2019 at 7:27
  • 18
    Er... the reason for deletion is quite clear. You may not agree with the reason, but asking "why was it deleted" seem rather disingenuous. I believe that what you want to ask is why is this answer not deemed suitable for new users.
    – yivi
    Jun 28, 2019 at 7:29
  • 36
    Reading the answer again, it mentions "try to avoid asking questions, but research first". This seems to be opposite to the present Stack Overflow goal of "getting more new contributors", and therefore deleted. This seems to be the most logical explanation. Jun 28, 2019 at 7:33
  • 190
    Yeah - it's a relic from the days when SO was for professional and enthusiast programmers. Jun 28, 2019 at 7:38
  • 18
    @weegee yeah, I can agree with that too, but it was deleted by the director of Community Strategy for Stack Overflow, so I am trying to come up with some reason as to why he might have deleted it. (Also don't look at the diamond at the end of my name and think I'm some sort of official, I'm just a community mod. I'm as helpless as you are) Jun 28, 2019 at 7:53
  • 10
    Imo editing this answer is not really feasible, if you strip out some of the hyperbolic parts (like the shame stuff), the other parts gain strength because it becomes less obvious that it's hyperbolic, so you would need to totally rewrite it (and then it becomes a different answer). The only thing you could do is add a disclaimer, but it already has a short disclaimer.
    – Erik A
    Jun 28, 2019 at 7:56
  • 38
    I don't think the community has much a say in these things @weegee. Remember the 404 polyglot page? All the other Stack Exchange sites have their own different 404 page, but we don't, even though the meta asking for it reached 300+ upvotes. Or Remember the Facebook is tracking us post with 700 upvotes? Facebook is still tracking us. It all comes down to what the staff and the marketing team of Stack Overflow need. Jun 28, 2019 at 8:01
  • 23
    IMO it is an excellent answer. I get there may be some language barriers at work but it is in no way unfriendly and running google translate would likely give you enough of a feel for what the overall message was. @ErikA's point about editing the hyperbole is a valid one.
    – QHarr
    Jun 28, 2019 at 8:07
  • 41
    This is a middle finger to everyone who has ever tried to help curate content here. I regret the time I've wasted and wish I could revoke the license for the content I've contributed. Jun 28, 2019 at 10:31
  • 17
    @Clive I'm going to stop helping completely, for good. No answers, no reviews, no votes, no flags - nothing. It's clear we're not wanted here, so what we can do is leave. Goodbye. Jun 28, 2019 at 10:43
  • 40
    I don't know how to healthily express the amount of disappointment I have in this site right now. That answer summed up just about everything you needed to know in order to start asking questions: "Get your stuff together before you post". It didn't dance around and passively try to get a question wizard working for new users to ignore, it stated flat out, do your research and make as much effort (you know, the hover text on the voting arrows) as possible.
    – zero298
    Jun 28, 2019 at 12:30
  • 17
    @yivi I'm just saying SO was used to open talk on meta before taking this kind of action usually as answers on SO were deemed safe to link to after a few weeks, that's just a sign SO has radically changed in its behavior. With this kind of reasoning we should not close as dupe, as the dupe target may got deleted at any time without regards to the closed question not getting their answer anymore and just breaking the system at root...
    – Tensibai
    Jun 28, 2019 at 12:44
  • 18
    @TinyGiant "That level of research effort has never been required" but it's expected. It's expected that readers shouldn't duplicate efforts you already made. Showing that research is required.
    – Braiam
    Jun 28, 2019 at 15:48

7 Answers 7

75

I'm kind of amazed that that answer made it this long. I'm absolutely shocked that it made it this long without any edits! For the top answer on a heavily-referenced meta question, that's rare... And in this case, unfortunate.

The core message is sound: search and research is essential, now more than ever. Even among our harshest critics, this is undisputed. We should do everything in our power to teach and encourage these skills!

However... The tone of the answer subverted that message. It was not written to be the general-purpose guide that it has been treated as. If our goal is to encourage folks to actually do that research, speaking to them like lazy children is counter-productive; if we want folks to aspire to be better we need to treat them like they can be.

Let's face it: the answer was more catharsis for frustrated teachers than a useful tool for learners. It reminds me more than anything of this famous XDA video...

That's funny stuff right there! Makes me smile every time. But even XDA doesn't blast that in the faces of their new users... They provide an easy-to-read, calmly-written list of guidelines, starting with...

Search before posting.

Use one of our search functions before posting or creating a new thread. Whether you have a question or just something new to share, it's very likely that someone has already asked that question or shared that news.

That's it. No hyperbole, no snark, no world-weary ranting. Just the facts and reasoning.

Let's do that too. I've re-written that answer, trying my best to preserve the message while ditching the nonsense. I think it's a clear improvement... How 'bout you?

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  • 25
    Thanks. It preserves the message and eliminates the snark. Everyone wins at the cost of several additional gray hairs.
    – Makoto
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:40
  • 10
    At this rate, I'll have torn out all my hair before it has a chance to turn grey, @Makoto. But for a good cause, I hope.
    – Shog9
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:42
  • 12
    "Even among our harshest critics, this is undisputed." I hate to have to point this out, but the deletion of this answer has resulted in quite a number of people disputing just that. That research is essential a very popular opinion, but it's not an undisputed one.
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 19:26
  • 7
    "Let's face it: the answer was more catharsis for frustrated teachers than a useful tool for learners." I'm not actually sure that's true. I suspect it's the reason it got a lot of the upvotes it did, but my interpretation is that the author was speaking to their own feelings, not those they're trying to put onto others. Many of the best programmers I know are proud of all of the problems they can solve, asking someone else to solve a problem they were capable of solving or finding an existing solution for would be embarrassing. That's a motivator in trying to research their problems.
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 19:29
  • 65
    I'm very glad that the answer has been restored, even if it's with the tone shifted. However, that doesn't really answer why the answer was deleted outright instead of being edited. We have all this talk about trying to edit things into shape, but then we throw out the nuclear option on an answer that addresses the core values of the site and has at least 600 votes agreeing with it.
    – zero298
    Jun 28, 2019 at 19:38
  • 19
    I hate to say it, @zero298 - but that's probably going to happen a lot more in the future. The company has been kinda checked out when it comes to Q&A for a long, long time - the classic absentee landlord situation. The folks here have been trying their best to keep things ticking along, but the support and coordination hasn't been there and it shows; now the landlord is trying to come back, clean the place up, fix the toilet that's been leaking, the roof that's been leaking, the HVAC with only two temperature settings: too hot and too cold... And there's gonna be a lot of dust and chaos.
    – Shog9
    Jun 28, 2019 at 20:53
  • 37
    Well, at least try talking with the tenants. It sucks when you are in the bath and the water just get cut off becase you are fixing the toilet. Or leaving a gaphole in the roof in the rainy season and not tell us.
    – Braiam
    Jun 28, 2019 at 20:56
  • 5
    Ironically it seems to be our milder critics who dispute that, @Servy. I don't think you can spend much time asking questions or trying to teach before you have to concede that learning how to research is the only way to get anywhere; it's the folks who aren't trying to learn and aren't trying to teach who seem to think that it's a one-sided problem. For everyone else, it's just debate over "ask first to get a direction on where to start reading" vs "ask last after reading everything".
    – Shog9
    Jun 28, 2019 at 21:35
  • 11
    @Shog9 I think the flawed assumption there is that people posting are always either trying to learn or teach. Some people aren't looking to do either; they're just looking to, for example, have someone solve their programming problem.
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 21:45
  • 9
    Probably safe to say those folks aren't doing a lot of reading on meta either, @Servy. We've spent an awful lot of energy - going back almost to the launch of the site - optimizing guidance for the folks least likely to read it; just think about all the words that've been wasted on question-blocked users. We should maybe aim more for the folks who actually might care what we say.
    – Shog9
    Jun 28, 2019 at 22:04
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    @Shog9 You say they're not on meta and when when I say thing on meta like "people asking questions should be doing their research" I get pushback. On meta. So while it's often not regulars, the people both exist, and [occasionally] post on meta. Now I'm not saying we need to cater to them (In fact I'm saying the opposite) but we do need to recognize that they exist. Just pretending no one does that doesn't allow us to deal with them when they're here.
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 22:06
  • 4
    Oh, I know they exist, @Servy. I've replied to them too, and answered hundreds & hundreds of support emails from them... I can count the number of success stories on the fingers of one hand. Heck, I know that there are coding shops where their entire business model is built on hiring people to chop up a work order into small pieces, feed them through sites like SO, and then reassemble the results... Again, the chance that you're gonna convince someone to change that behavior with a bit of text is very close to nil. So why waste the effort? Write for the folks who'll listen.
    – Shog9
    Jun 28, 2019 at 22:09
  • 6
    @Shog9 I'm not advocating convincing those people to not do things like that. All I said was that the quote, "The core message is sound: search and research is essential, now more than ever. Even among our harshest critics, this is undisputed." isn't true. There are people that dispute that. And while we're not building the site for them, they will use the site, so the site needs to be designed around people like that using it.
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 22:19
  • 26
    "Let's face it: the answer was more catharsis for frustrated teachers than a useful tool for learners." For the record, I distinctively remember reading the post around the time I started using SO, and it isn't nearly as insulting/unreadable/hyperbolic as you'd think. The post helped. A lot.
    – Passer By
    Jun 29, 2019 at 14:51
  • 10
    The core message is sound: search and research is essential, now more than ever. this is not the core message of the original answer as it was worded. It was more along the lines of learn your craft, put in some real effort to solve the problem yourself, find out if others had the same problem, and only when all else fails, come ask here because you will be able to ask a well described problem with all the details you will need to get the help you need and be understand the answers you get. And honestly that is the critical thinking message our industry needs, not search first.
    – user10677470
    Jun 30, 2019 at 1:48
38

I think moderators or 20K users would better undelete this answer (possibly with some cosmetic edit, although provided screen shot doesn't seem to indicate strong need for that).

At other sites community doesn't hesitate to challenge and correct mistakes made by management (example).

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    20k users can’t undelete it (already tried). Mods only
    – Clive
    Jun 28, 2019 at 10:05
  • 2
    @Clive thanks, I was wondering about this myself. Anyway, 10K/20K users can do mentioned cosmetic edit even while it still stays deleted (I'd consider removing part between "rope" and "that's", along with part of note explaining use of shame)
    – gnat
    Jun 28, 2019 at 10:08
  • 3
    Yes, only mods can undelete mod-deleted-posts. Also applies for the "owner" of the post, they can't undelete that either.
    – Tom
    Jun 28, 2019 at 10:40
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    OTOH it is now a part of FAQ. And the answer was at the top. As a guidance to newbie the now top answer meta.stackoverflow.com/a/261598/113662 fits much better. Jun 28, 2019 at 10:47
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    @TadeuszKopec an edit with large warning saying this answer is hyperbolic and linking to the next one on top of it would have been enough. This kind of action is my opinion just trashing the SO community opinion in favor of commercial branding. This makes me feel unwelcome on SO anymore as SO the company (Tim is not an elected mod, but an employee) now single sided remove historical things without even opening a talk before because it doesn't match the company view.
    – Tensibai
    Jun 28, 2019 at 12:18
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    @TadeuszKopec That answer "fits much better" only if your opinion matches that of the answerer. It is also filled with hyperbole and opinion: "Despite what the populace may lead you to believe" ... "Do not be intimidated into withholding questions simply because you don't hold a computer science degree in the subject, or are concerned about the precious minutes it would take away from Mother Theresa's busy schedule." How is that any more "welcoming" than the previously hyperbolic answer? Oh, it's less welcoming only to old users, not unwelcoming to new users. I see... Jun 28, 2019 at 12:49
  • 24
    I would give them a bit more than 5 hours to defend their position before engaging in delete / undelete wars. If they don't, I guess it would be easy to test if they don't care much about the answer or our opinion. Though the fact this was just deleted without consulting us in advance says a lot.
    – Baum mit Augen Mod
    Jun 28, 2019 at 12:50
  • 4
    @HereticMonkey Let's see how long that answer stands. The idea that "Stack Overflow's mission is to be an objective Q&A site "for professional and enthusiast programmers"" (quoted from the current top answer) also seems to run against the mission statement on the new homepage.
    – Baum mit Augen Mod
    Jun 28, 2019 at 12:53
  • Sure @BaummitAugen, my comment was more directed at Tadeusz' thinking that answer was somehow less obnoxious than the previous top answer, than Stack Overflow's deletion of it anyway. SO can delete what they want when they want; it's their platform. There are risks involved in those actions, but they are well aware of them. Jun 28, 2019 at 12:59
  • @HereticMonkey Point taken. I edited the answer and removed those parts. You can see that Tim Post edited it yesterday too. Description of his edit is also quite interesting. Jun 28, 2019 at 13:38
  • 2
    I think the main problem was the use of the faq tag. This isn't a faq.
    – Braiam
    Jun 28, 2019 at 13:38
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    Imo the problem likely was people slapping new users with this in an autocomment every time they thought someone didn't do their research.
    – Erik A
    Jun 28, 2019 at 14:18
  • 1
    @TadeuszKopec The issue with the new top answer is the same as the now-deleted one, except in the opposite direction. Where the deleted one went a little too far for the sake of emphasis (read: that's the purpose of hyperbole), the new top answer doesn't go far enough.
    – TylerH
    Jun 28, 2019 at 18:36
  • 1
    @ErikA Do you have any data to back that up or is it just a theory?
    – TylerH
    Jun 28, 2019 at 18:37
  • 1
    @TylerH Just a theory, I've seen quite a few autocomments that nearly made me empathize with the welcoming blogs and did refer to this specific post. I can only speculate about the true motivations behind deleting the post.
    – Erik A
    Jun 28, 2019 at 18:40
14

My gut reaction: the answer is hyperbolic and laced with just enough sarcasm, that someone who simply glances at it without reading for context would be put off by it.

The answer was good, and I too don't like seeing it removed from after so long. But given that we have people who take "unwelcoming" to the levels of a rallying cry, its deletion was inevitable.

0
4

Answers with that many upvotes should not be deleted offhandedly. Instead the community should be asked to improve them. Removing the apparent bad tone while keeping the content intact is quite easy to do. Everyone can help.

If we start deleting all the content on meta that we don't like, we will end with a very poor meta.

The answer has been un-deleted in the mean time but is still locked. To improve it, it needs to be unlocked. That should be done and then we can reformulate it improving the tone, but keeping the content intact.

5
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    Personally, I really don't like the style of the actions. Aug 6, 2019 at 11:59
  • 2
    It was locked to give the CM community time to weigh in and ensure its content aligns with the company verbiage and code of conduct. It does no good for users to hear conflicting remarks. Once they say the present verbiage aligns wirh their messaging, it’ll be unlocked and rolled forward to the appropriate version. There was quite a bit of an edit war and lots of changes post @shog9 ‘s edit. Aug 6, 2019 at 12:41
  • 2
    @GeorgeStocker - A mod note under the post would have really helped prevent speculation about it. If the issue recently is transparency or lack thereof... Aug 6, 2019 at 12:52
  • 1
    @GeorgeStocker I don't really understand why you do so much work for them. If the company wants to keep the post locked, they should do it, not you. I think it should be unlocked and the community should have a try at improving it. The goal should be to keep the content intact but changing the tone, as said in this answer. Aug 6, 2019 at 12:57
  • 1
    @StoryTeller Done. Thanks again for the suggestion. Aug 6, 2019 at 13:29
-32

This is my fault. I've been curating the FAQ and adding a lot of the proposed FAQ questions to the FAQ. When doing this I need to be cleaning up the answers and comments. The FAQ only needs one or two good answers. Unfortunately life off the site got in the way and I didn't complete what I began, but I am rectifying this.

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    Nope. While you might've played a role in this, this clearly wasn't your fault. You didn't make the decision to delete that answer.
    – Erik A
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:22
  • 7
    This can't be your fault, Yvette: the wiki answer could have been improved instead of being deleted.
    – Cœur
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:23
  • I should have cleaned up all the posts before adding them to faq
    – user3956566
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:34
  • 13
    So now all the other answers get deleted? This...thing grows messier by the second. But apparently that's how faq questions are supposed to be handled? If that amounts to basically reshaping the entirety of the thread anyway, I guess that could indeed have avoided some of this mess. ;-) Jun 28, 2019 at 17:36
  • 2
    @ChristianRau this really is on me. ouchie wowser. Yeh I've deleted them and left comments for the authors to add salient points to the accepted answer. There's also been edits made to the accepted answer adding things from the others. There's no point having the same thing said over and over. Make one good answer.
    – user3956566
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:40
  • 3
    Yes, I saw Shog9's extremely helpful edits. Though, they're largely orthogonal to the existence of other answers. But if that's how faqs work, whatever. But...after sudden removal of everything but that answer, this entire discussion feels about 567% more wasted now than it felt before (which was already quite a bit). But maybe it also encourages everyone to simply disengage from this mess. Jun 28, 2019 at 17:45
  • 2
    "Make one good answer", now if we managed to get the main site to do the same.
    – Braiam
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:45
  • 6
    Yvette, while I appreciate you trying to recognize your own hand in this, it really isn't your fault or your doing. That answer has been linked to since long before it was in the FAQ list, and the conflict surrounding it did not originate with your May 25th designation of it being an FAQ. Your action may have somewhat inflated the visibility of the conflict, but it was not the trigger instigating the conflict.
    – Davy M
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:51
  • 26
    I'm downvoting this because it is explicitly not your fault. It's pretty clear from the edit history of the answer as to how the answer was deleted and your name doesn't match the delete action.
    – zero298
    Jun 28, 2019 at 19:40
  • 2
    The part on cleaning up answers to create FAQ disturbs me. 'till now the guideline was "respect others' posts and work". Is it lifted in case of FAQ creation? Jul 2, 2019 at 8:46
  • @TadeuszKopec it has nothing to do with respecting work, it's the nature of the faq. Please don't conflate the two. The faq is supposed to be a place for clear answers and a reference place for users. They are also always community wiki collaborations, meaning we don't need lots of answers under them
    – user3956566
    Jul 2, 2019 at 10:37
  • 2
    @YvetteColomb “The faq is supposed to be a place for clear answers and a reference place for users.” That’s fine for that FAQ, but where’s the relationship to that six year old Q&A that was never meant to be that specific FAQ? If you find that over 99% of that old Q&A doesn’t fit, wouldn’t be the logical conclusion, not to use that Q&A, instead of deleting most of it and editing the remains beyond all recognition? After all, you could have picked an arbitrary, entirely unrelated Q&A for that purpose and transform it into your desired FAQ with even less destruction (if it had less content)…
    – Holger
    Jul 2, 2019 at 11:51
  • 2
    @Holger please be mindful before jumping to conclusions or making assumptions. Look at the edit history of the question. Mods do not decide what becomes a faq, they are tagged faq-proposal and when they mature and have enough votes, the mods add them to the faq. read this meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/251225/…
    – user3956566
    Jul 2, 2019 at 13:32
  • @YvetteColomb besides the fact that the post you have linked still is newer than the Q&A in question, it only describes a process of creating new Q&As as FAQ proposal. Which somehow makes sense, when you are going to interpret votes on the Q&A as votes for the faq-proposal. It does not make any sense to badge “faq-proposal” on a six year old Q&A and assume that everyone agrees with that proposal or, even worse, vandalizing the existing content and call that “they mature”, blaming the posts created years before the “faq-proposal” for not fitting into the faq shape.
    – Holger
    Jul 2, 2019 at 13:52
  • 7
    @YvetteColomb and when you say “Mods do not decide what becomes a faq”, despite all these editing actions and deletions for turning the Q&A into an FAQ was made by moderators, who is then making the decision? That single user who added the [faq-proposal] badge to the question? Really?
    – Holger
    Jul 2, 2019 at 13:54
-70

Why was it deleted? Perhaps because it gave terrible advice that has long been against site policy?

But it was clumsy to delete it without an announcement or discussion.

3
  • 10
    "It is a long time since the official and community accepted policy was that a question that can be answered by a simple Google can still be a valid question." Are you sure you aren't conflating two things? That it can be found with a simple google search, isn't the same as no prior research done, which the answer mainly focus on.
    – Braiam
    Jun 28, 2019 at 14:45
  • Pretty sure How to Ask has always started with "Search, and research ...and keep track of what you find. Even if you don't find a useful answer elsewhere on the site, including links to related questions that haven't helped can help others in understanding how your question is different from the rest." Jun 28, 2019 at 20:49
  • 17
    Seriously? Spend time hunting down resources that might contain your answer before you post a question is "terrible" advice? And you have the gall to complain about its hyperbole?
    – jpmc26
    Jun 29, 2019 at 17:28
-95

The answer is simply over the top, and correcting that would mean writing a completely different answer. If you take all of the inside humor out of that answer, there isn't much left that isn't addressed by the now top answer.

It is just too much for someone not indoctrinated to the "cuddly snark" style (for lack of better phrasing), and off-putting enough in the absence of that to make new folks simply want to go elsewhere.

Content sometimes gets deleted when it falls out of relevancy. Our attrition rate, especially when it comes to the people we don't manage to entice to participate here on meta is disturbing and we've got to fix that if the site is going to be relevant to the expectations of people learning to code in 2019 as opposed to 2009.

Nowhere do we say research isn't expected, the top answer specifically says it is, we're just saying it without a lot of snark and hyperbole that's open to interpretation and being interpeted in a manner that's a lot different from the time that answer was written.

73
  • 28
    But the top answer isn't telling people to do their research. It's telling people that they should be asking a question on SO even if the answers are already readily accessible. It's telling people to not do their research, beyond just a simple search of SO. If the answer was advocating for a similar research practices, but with simply a different tone, that would have been radically different. "Do a search on SO", and "debug/troubleshoot the problem, search everywhere you can, many times, and search through every resource you can get your hands on" are not the same thing.
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 15:56
  • 20
    @TimPost An answer saying research on SO and an answer saying research everywhere you can are not the same. The former is completely inadequate research in the eyes of many people, who reflected that opinion on that question.
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 16:06
  • 79
    Whoa whoa whoa whoa hold on a second. We don't get to set the rules for our own community? Snark aside, what is the implication of this??
    – Makoto
    Jun 28, 2019 at 16:09
  • 75
    @TimPost SO managed to become extremely large and successful following the model that a highly curated site with high quality standards for questions and answers will produce useful content for lots of people. That is what attracted your current, rather large, user base, and garnered the attention of the entire programming community. Saying, "everyone will leave unless we remove our quality standards and encourage people who don't want to meet our current standards to contribute" just doesn't make sense to the rest of us. We all came here for the high quality standards.
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 16:10
  • 23
    @TimPost We've seen what happens to all of the other sites out there that just let everything in, and say that it doesn't matter if you do your research, or ask clear questions, or are considerate of people answering. Those sites don't do well. Why is SO so dead set on turning itself into the sites it displaced?
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 16:10
  • 22
    @TimPost "You should care because if new people don't start participating here there won't be any people here at all." If the price is to get all the ones that are here out, I don't think that's a fair price to pay. I'm all for including them, but I'm not going to exclude others for that. The goal doesn't justify the means after all.
    – Braiam
    Jun 28, 2019 at 16:16
  • 15
    Also, given that we're talking about the views of meta regulars vs. non-meta regulars, I feel obligated to point out that the author of that post has posted exactly once on meta, and that was it. It wasn't posted by a meta regular (and personally, I'd argue that's why it's as over the top as it is, most meta regulars answering that question would have been more muted in their responses).
    – Servy
    Jun 28, 2019 at 16:19
  • 86
    @TimPost Since you've finally admitted what a bunch of us have already been suspecting for a long time, I think it's probably better to come clean with this with an official blog post that details SE's direction, why it is doing it, and why it is worth alienating the entire meta community (which I do agree is an echo chamber). It's better to just give everyone the red pill now rather than to continue this endless frustration and lack of transparancy. This will go a long way to re-earning all of our respect.
    – Mysticial
    Jun 28, 2019 at 16:22
  • 23
    I'll wait for the blog post, but all I'll say is that if curation isn't seen as something integral to this whole process, then it'll turn into a whole hot mess.
    – Makoto
    Jun 28, 2019 at 16:44
  • 30
    @TimPost , regarding "constricting quickly". When you see that "not enough people investing in curating a presence on the site", could it be because the site has been catering to "give me the coodez" crowd for that last 5 years, and these people are not, by and large, the kind of people who "curate a presence". Could it be that your "welcoming" policies are catching up with you now?
    – user3458
    Jun 28, 2019 at 17:43
  • 22
    I take real issue with a lot of the things happening here. First and foremost, while I may be OK with the outcome of that answer being deleted, it's hard to be sure, because what I am sure of is I'm not OK with how it was deleted, e.g. unilaterally, without any discussion or attempt at editing it. Did you just wake up today and say "I feel like deleting that answer. Yep, today's the day."? Or was there some internal discussion; some raging debate among employees? Was there something raised by internal tools like surveys recently that prompted this action? Who knows! You haven't said.
    – TylerH
    Jun 28, 2019 at 18:48
  • 24
    Third, and perhaps most importantly, "A few hundred people on meta don't get to set all the rules for tens of thousands of people who don't want to participate here, mainly because of how abrasive this place can be." and "* I said all the rules. Ten people can't rule over thousands, and when the goals of a few are clearly not aligned with the needs of the majority, we have to step in.*" the obvious inaccuracy of the statements aside, aren't you being hypocritical when you are overruling the majority here (Meta consensus of several hundred people) with your unilateral deletion of the answer?
    – TylerH
    Jun 28, 2019 at 18:55
  • 47
    The analogy I feel compelled to make is that we're trying to cultivate an environment that encourages teaching people to fish here, and you keep slapping our wrists and saying "no, just give them a darn fish and send them off", instead. But the frustrating thing is every time we ask "what are we doing wrong?" you come out and say "we agree you should teach people how to fish, but you should be nicer (or whatever attribute) in doing so", meanwhile your actions don't match up; you are still slapping wrists and handing out fish.
    – TylerH
    Jun 28, 2019 at 19:00
  • 74
    Your attrition rate is getting really bad when it comes to veteran users whom you've apparently made it your mission to alienate. That's a lot worse, because we have rather a lot to do with making this site what it is and in driving new users to it. You might want to take a step back and reconsider before you engage the nuclear weapons. Meta has always been a platform for people to share their opinions in a constructive way, and although you might disagree with it, that answer was neither rude nor inappropriate. Wrong answers can be downvoted, not deleted. That's always been the rule, Tim. Jun 29, 2019 at 0:50
  • 59
    Please do let me know if the rules have changed, by the way, so I can be sure to delete this answer as being over the top and uncorrectable without a major edit. Jun 29, 2019 at 0:53

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