What are the specific, short, medium and long term efforts by the Stack Overflow team to reduce the overhead of weeding through answers containing outdated or outright inaccurate information?
I'm asking about current efforts to test new UX for allowing the Stack Overflow community to efficiently deal with obvious bad information cluttering otherwise useful and relevant questions on this website.
The context for this question is well described in "How to deal with hugely upvoted, bad and outdated answers?"
Notes from that thread include:
A "correct answer" at a given time should not need to be edited to completely swap out the solution.
Existing answer should be preserved but also marked as out of date, similar to how Amazon sometimes indicates a "newer version of this product may be available."
Active / Oldest Votes filters help some but not if people are adding comments trying to correct the most upvoted or "correct" answer.
Having users spend points to reduce traction on an outdated answer, while upvoting a new correct answer is doubly wrong because it hurts the original author and it has a negative impact on the score of the voters.
I am both a user and sometimes answer author and editor. Stack Overflow is affected by a substantial amount of cruft, particularly in modern web technology and DevOps where methodology has changed substantially over the past 3-5 years.
It does not seem that the current voting behaviors expected from crowds is effective, but rather a "retire this answer" option needs its own votable option which hides, but preserves answers deemed inaccurate.
I wrote this question because I scored 10 points this morning on an upvote to my answer in this question regarding Alpine Linux. This is a good example of a "problematic" Stack Overflow Q/A setup that is draining time that people could be using to contribute to the Stack Overflow community.
Additional previous questions related to this topic: "How to retire outdated information?" and "Good question, old version-dependent answer"