Previously on Meta (note: you are contractually obligated to read the preceding phrase in the tone of an American TV show narrator).
For context, the Community bot is a process whereby old questions with an un-accepted answer are pushed ("bumped") to the front page of Stack Overflow, to give those questions some extra visibility in the hope they'll finally be accept-answered. The intention behind this is noble, but ultimately futile for one or more of the below reasons:
- The asker is a one-question-wonder, therefore unlikely to ever return to the site and accept an answer
- The asker didn't bother accepting the answer then, and is unlikely to do so now
- The question was on-topic for SO at the time it was asked, but no longer is
- The question is extremely poor but has been upvote-brigaded, presumably by the asker's friends or colleagues, which is likely why it originally attracted an answer
- The question is time-relevant, e.g. relating to a specific version of software that has now been superseded
A further downside is that such questions are likely to attract low-quality answers from new users.
I'm sure a few of you are going to correctly point out that some of the above points would be addressed by flagging these old questions for closure. But that requires curation effort that could be far more productively spent on a new question - as opposed to an old, dead one that was quietly and unobtrusively bit-rotting away until its corpse got pinned to the front page.
To quote from an answer on the above-linked Meta question, this pretty much sums up my attitude towards the bot's bumping behaviour and how useful it is:
I don't remember any case where I was glad the bot had bumped a question. It was always just a chore to deal with the question so it wouldn't get bumped again.
if (views >= 100) { daysToAge = 4; } else { daysToAge = 14; }
stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/close-questions