I figured that it might help to give another view from a "new" user, who is in a similar (but still a bit different) situation like the one Scratte described; I will focus a bit more on the reviewing/moderation aspect here.
Asking
Technically, I joined Stack Overflow around three years ago, in order to ask for help on a weird interrupt problem when working on a research kernel. Of course, as an active programmer I have already been reading Stack Overflow answers for years, but I never was really interested into what that weird numbers und bronze/silver/golden dots near the user names meant (I won't ever take part in that anyway, right?). It just looked like a forum with great resources which are not put behind an annoying paywall. That understanding very quickly changed when I posted that first question -- I believe I got the grasp on what is on-topic here quite instantly, just by reading the tour page and one or two pages from the help center.
Since then I am following a few simple rules when asking a question:
- Is it about programming?
- Has it been answered before? (i.e., can I find the information by running some Google searches?)
- Does it have any value for others? (i.e., someone else might have the same problem, no matter how weird it is)
- Can someone else answer it within a reasonable amount of time, given the corresponding knowledge? Or the other way round: Would I bother to answer this question?
So asking on-topic questions never really was a problem for me; this is supported by the fact that none of my questions have been closed yet.
However, I should note that my approach on problem solving naturally leads to very few Stack Overflow questions. Usually I only ask after spending lots of time googling and trying myself, so the likelihood of asking a trivial or a duplicate question is quite small.
Answering & Reviewing
After asking my first question (unanswered, one upvote) and writing some random answer addressing a previously unanswered library compilation problem (no activity there since then), I did not further contribute for more than a year. My "real" activity only started last year in August, when I decided to "return something to the community" after years of passive reading. This is the point where I actively started looking for questions I may be able to answer, and got an understanding of how the reputation and badge system works. Note that I still did not read meta at this point, nor bothered with all that moderation stuff ("Flags?! Is this some kind of CTF competition?").
That quickly changed with seeing the incoming flood of poor questions; I tried answering some, but got quickly tired. Still, I was collecting reputation and finally got the first moderation privileges (i.e., Triage and First Posts queue). Participating in these queues looked like a good way to a) get rid of bad questions quickly, in order to b) find good questions which I can answer.
This where I had to start reading meta -- I really wanted to avoid doing something wrong, so I spent lots of my free time digging through the [faq] posts regarding the Triage queue, flags, closing and so on. I also started lurking in SOCVR, in order to get to know some of the most active community members and see some practical moderation.
Thus, the first frustrating experience:
(I) You have to read a lot of unstructured content before being able to do correct moderation.
After doing some reviews and reviewing my reviews (i.e., by looking what other users decided) I noticed that many have obviously not read the [faq] posts and randomly clicked on "Requires Editing" or "Looks OK", disputing my "Unsalvagable" flags. This was the second frustrating experience:
(II) Even though you have spent lots of time reading all those instructions, this does not mean that others have done that.
I eventually got tired of Triage and First Posts, due to that and because many of my post flags simply aged away (56 as of now; 159 were marked helpful). This left the impression that I really wasted a lot of time -- especially when these off-topic questions get answered and people earn reputation for it.
Reading meta
Somewhere around last September I got fully engaged with meta and have been following most discussions there since then. Ironically, the big blow-ups at MSE have shown to me that these sites have a very dedicated community, which I wanted to become a part of, although it was frustrating to see that the company did not plan to improve anything about the various moderation and tooling flaws, and, at the opposite, seemed to be actually encouraging asking bad questions.
Last week I finally crossed 2k and started reviewing suggested edits. I really like to do that, since I really feel that I am doing something constructive (my actions directly affect keeping and improving post quality, no aging away). But I also had to spend a lot time reading meta again, in order to work out all those small edge cases -- e.g., code changes in answers: Is it allowed? If yes, how much? What about new library releases? Create a new answer, edit an older one?
This is my third and last frustrating experience as a newcomer:
(III) There is some meta post with lots of upvotes, but is it really consensus? Is everyone expected follow it?
Turns out, no: For example, I always believed that spam flags on gibberish questions are okay. Then I had to read that a moderator stated that they handle that completely differently. I know that there are some areas where a consistent handling is simply impossible, but this one does look like a very clear case to me.
Conclusion
So, I fear that this has maybe become a bit ranty, but I figured that was needed to point out how "new" users may see the site when trying to learn the ropes. But I also want this post to be constructive, so I asked myself the question, "What would have helped me?".
Having to read before starting moderation is probably hard to avoid, and forcing new reviewers to do so is likely impossible. Maybe one could be quicker and stricter with (short) review bans for folks doing unconstructive reviews? This is a difficult question, and I don't have a practicable drop-in solution for problem (II) at hand.
But for all others who want to read and follow the consensus, but do it in a more efficient way, an organized and (most importantly) binding resource on moderation would be very helpful. How would that work?
- We collect all the spread information from the help center, [faq] and meta in one location.
- This does not need to be a large, consecutive and unreadable document: A well-conceived and searchable structure could divide the content into small parts, which can be found and understood easily.
- If there is a discussion on an edge case and clear consensus (e.g. by reaching a certain ratio between upvotes vs. downvotes), the result is put into that document and thus becomes mandatory for everyone (including moderators). Challenging those is obviously still allowed, by creating an appropriate meta post and meeting the required vote threshold. Note that this is intended for edge cases which are easy to capture (like the gibberish spam flag one) -- there will always be unclear cases, but having clear and easily findable guidelines for the large majority of cases would be certainly helpful.
- Whenever I am unsure whether a question might be on-topic, an answer is NAA, a suggested edit is "too much", and so on, I could just check this resource, and don't have to waste time reading multiple large meta discussions. For example: "Edit adds new language version to answer -> Reject".
This could be done by the community, but official (and technical) support by the company would certainly give it more legitimacy (e.g., by fully replacing the help center). However, it would still be a huge amount of work, and we would have to decide on whether it is worth the effort, or if we better keep things as-is and rather focus on small improvements, with the risk of losing or misguiding new members.