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This recent answer posits that due to a hypothetical decline in "interesting" questions, a large number of high-reputation users have been decreasing their activity on the site, especially in the number of questions they answer. I found that hypothesis and analysis interesting enough to be addressed outside the context of its question (which was focused primarily on other issues).

My questions are:

  • Is it true that most high-reputation users have been decreasing their answering activity recently?
  • If so, why is it occurring? (Input from high-reputation users whose activity has slowed would be very useful)

Other considerations are:

  • Is it a problem? (Perhaps it is simply a case of SO becoming more "democratic", with lower reputation users and "newer blood" filling the gap).
  • If so, how can it be slowed or stopped?

To be clear, I do not necessarily agree with the original post that this decrease in high-rep user activity comes from a decline in question quality, nor that such a decline in quality necessarily exists. I could imagine several alternative hypotheses, as have others:

  • Most users increase their activity over time before hitting a peak and decreasing (as suggested by Gaël Laurans here)
  • An increase in low-rep answerers has decreased the need for high-rep answerers (as suggested by podiluska here)
  • That some users may be motivated by reaching the top level of privilege (20K rep), and are less motivated to answer after reaching it
  • That high-reputation users have become not less active, but rather more selective, editing or voting to close low-quality questions rather than answering them (an analysis of their commenting, editing and reviewing behavior might help confirm this)
  • That high-reputation users earn a steady "income" from old posts, and it is therefore no longer necessary to answer to gain rep (as suggested by Martijn Pieters here)
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    I'm only at 37k now, so not one of the really high-rep users, but personally I find that the last of your 8 bullet points is spot on at least for me personally. I'm much less interested in answering as I am in seeing interesting answers that I can learn from. I also am more selective about what questions I answer. Nowadays I mostly try to answer stuff that I personally find interesting, rather than what I think would give me the most reputation (interestingly these two goals are pretty much uncombinable for my main field of interest).
    – Niklas B.
    Commented Apr 29, 2014 at 16:47
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    I also don't think this is a problem. The good questions still tend to get very good answers, whether by high- or low-rep users, and I don't really care about bad questions.
    – Niklas B.
    Commented Apr 29, 2014 at 16:56
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    You can only answer so many question about how to properly do a group by before you get burned out.
    – Zane
    Commented Apr 29, 2014 at 18:18
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    Yes, because the quality of "new" questions is going in the toilet. Almost everything I see sucks or is a duplicate.
    – Aaron Bertrand Staff
    Commented Apr 29, 2014 at 18:25
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    @AaronBertrand: As an interesting sidenote, your answering activity shows only a mild decrease over the past two years (indeed, according to my test it's not statistically significant) Commented Apr 29, 2014 at 18:30
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    I'm personally bored from the tag I've been participating the most (Delphi). There's a lot of repetitive questions. Askers usually listen only the highest rep users ignoring the others (but they are under certain pressure sometimes). No motivation to reach a new privilege is also a bit demotivating for me. But I'm glad it happened, since I've started to invest my time into living :) [I'm not a high rep user though]
    – TLama
    Commented Apr 29, 2014 at 19:39
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    @NiklasB. "I'm only at 37k"... it does not compute... is there life after 20k?
    – brasofilo
    Commented Apr 29, 2014 at 21:53
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    @NiklasB. I always thought 10k was the entrance to high-rep, but I guess in SO terms, this is just Junior's High Rep :)
    – brasofilo
    Commented Apr 29, 2014 at 22:00
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    I'm personally kind of curious what the trend is for those of us much closer to 3k (like me). I personally hit a pretty big wall after I hit 3.6k or so (I've gained less than 300 rep in the last 6 months). Except for the "reaching 20k" bullet-point, I'd say the bullet points could apply to us too. Commented Apr 30, 2014 at 5:39
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    I spend pretty much all my time now (which has not decreased) looking for things to answer. Unfortunately, that often just turns up nill and I end up just burning through my close/downvotes then going away in disgust. Commented May 1, 2014 at 2:39
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    The UI is built to make it super-easy to ask questions, not find answers. Now that we have all the most common questions the UI needs reworking to streamline getting the answer; not asking the question. If it is easier for a noob to find the answer than to ask then the average quality will improve.
    – John Mee
    Commented May 2, 2014 at 5:20
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    @JohnMee maybe true, but I personally just use google to find an answer, which works well for me. If there is a good match on stackoverflow it will be visible in google. for some noob-questions I just copy & paste the question title as-is into google and get a perfect answer. for me, the research workflow is (most of the time) 1) google, 2) read a book, 3) ask a friend, 4) ask on SO. that's why I ask so few questions.
    – Michael
    Commented May 2, 2014 at 12:41
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    This is one of the most interesting posts I've read on meta in quite a while. Commented May 2, 2014 at 20:30
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    The high rep folks can be really hit and miss. Sometimes they help, sometimes they chastise or make fun of people. Maybe it has something to do with wading through "don't use mysql_* functions..." comments on EVERY piece of code that uses them (aren't we supposed to stay on topic?) I see people belittled for too much code, too little code. I see people rip people apart for not providing code (even though that isn't listed as a deal breaker on the "how to ask a question" page). Maybe they're just burned out on the negativity?
    – Mattt
    Commented May 2, 2014 at 20:35
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    Sorry to be redundant, but to echo some of the above: I’ve also stopped answering as much because the ratio of horrible questions to half-decent ones has increased. On the other hand, it’s my job to close them… oh, and of course, the fact that this question and its accepted answer got so many upvotes. And the state of suggested edits. Oops, got off track.
    – Ry- Mod
    Commented May 3, 2014 at 2:04

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I stopped asking and answering questions because the moderation here is hostile towards any question that isn't absolutely A+ flawless. Even for an otherwise very good question, any speck of a problem -- however reparable -- and the question goes down -- often along with the answers.

I'd rather waste time sifting through slightly dubious questions than waste time crafting a half-decent question only to have it shot down. Maybe it's convenient for people answering questions, but for people asking questions, this site is becoming an unpredictable waste of time.

You may not agree with me when I say that the moderation on this site is way too heavy-handed. Indeed, even with very clear evidence that this is at least sometimes the case, moderators are reluctant to admit to it.

But it should be difficult to deny that the moderation here is, at the very least, way too high-brow and anal-retenetive to encourage participation. A common theme of the complaints regarding SO (and a lot of other SE sites) is that there's zero informational content to the complaints moderators have regarding questions: you could ask a question, have it -1'd or closed, and you'd never know why. Askers just "have the door slammed shut in their face", as one person put it. Moderation here is just too flippant.

Sure, you could read the FAQ or ask on meta, but when the moderators and voters don't follow the FAQ very closely, or when moderators react to questions based on keywords rather than actual content, all we're left with is frustration.

I'm also not the only one to notice the sheer number of wrong moderation moves. My last two questions, which I asked last year, were both closed or flogged, despite both being attacked for exact opposite reasons. In the end, after I asked about it on meta, one was well-answered, and the other was reopened. And no, it wasn't because my questions were both extreme in any way; they were both categorically opposite in nature.

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    The first several paragraphs are contradictory. You complain that the standards for question quality are too high, yet you say that you've stopped answering questions. That doesn't make much sense to me. Moreover, I'll ask you what I ask everyone who makes sweeping claims like this about the moderation on Stack Overflow: do you have any specific examples of "very good questions" that have just "any speck of a problem -- however reparable" that got closed (or otherwise "[went] down")?
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Commented May 4, 2014 at 10:25
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    People answer with reasons why they stop answering questions, and you... refuse to believe them? Most highly upvoted answers here complain about bad questions, though. That's not to say you don't have a point; you do. But you have to acknowledge that there is another part to the puzzle, the volume and quality of the content coming in.
    – Pekka
    Commented May 4, 2014 at 14:17
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    @CodyGray It makes perfect sense, and I explained it. There's no point answering questions when there's such a high likelihood that the question will get closed or worse. There are plenty of questions that are good enough to answer, but tarnish this apparently pristine site. It's exactly this kind of polarized classification of good and bad questions you demonstrate that we're fed up with. It's also extremely clear that you didn't read my answer at all, and again, that's something I've noticed to be true every time there's a discussion about moderation issues here. Hear no evil, see no evil. Commented May 4, 2014 at 22:10
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    @Pekka웃 Of course, but people have been complaining about poor quality questions and answers for years -- myself included. That's just a fact of life on the Internet for a site that has no barrier of entry. To think otherwise is just part of the kids-these-days phenomenon, where people tend to think newcomers are increasingly stupid. The moderation is what really changed. Commented May 4, 2014 at 22:16
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    @CodyGray And really, specific examples? There's one (two) right there in my answer. Again, it's glaringly obvious that you have your ears covered. Here's another off the top of my head. If you'd ever even read these things, you'd see that people are sick of this site with good reason. Blogs via Google tend to have more easily visible examples because, of course, the mods here love hiding controversy. But if you're honest, you'll see plenty here too. Commented May 4, 2014 at 22:37
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    Even for an otherwise very good question, any speck of a problem -- ... and the question goes down ... totally agreed, and that sucks. But what exactly do you suggest we do about that? Not vote to close? Then the problem remains unfixed, because there's more stuff coming in than eyeballs to look at it. Give custom advice instead of voting to close? Tried that, doesn't work. There's too much stuff coming in to give advice on how to fix it for each one. Have some canned comments to provide custom advice? Tried that, caused massive problems.
    – Pekka
    Commented May 5, 2014 at 0:27
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    Have some better canned comments to provide custom advice? Is expected to not work. Just ask people to comment more? Likely to be a debacle; many users aren't able to make non-abrasive comments as it stands and there is no way you can change that. Delay showing downvotes to make newbies feel less bad? Hides the message that you need to fix your content. And so on, and so on. I remember Jeff Atwood saying that he never intended the degree of strictness that the community enforces these days. How to turn around the trend in a way that works?
    – Pekka
    Commented May 5, 2014 at 0:35
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    @Pekka웃 I ignore the capacity issue because it's been beaten to death. It's the other side that needs attention right now. The size of the site isn't an excuse for many of the new kinds of overzealous moderation we're seeing. Some mistakes in interpretation of the question content, sure, but moderators are increasingly dickish even upon review and in meta. I mean, just look at this. It's bad management culture. There's no two ways around it. If it were truly just a capacity issue, the solution would be to hire more mods or queue newbies. Commented May 5, 2014 at 0:56
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    @Pekka웃 I don't care how tired you are of trivial questions, or if you disagree to the idea that sometimes it's hard to know exactly what to look for; demanding users RTFM is ridiculously unprofessional. It's flippant. Condescending. Self-congratulating. You're practically trying to fight trolls by being trolls. For years there have been several software solutions proposed on how to moderate the community moderators, but seldom tried even when mods begrudgingly agree. Why? Because fundamentally, this site is now more about taxonomic rigor (read: being anal) than about content or helping. Commented May 5, 2014 at 1:22
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    @Rei no one wants to introduce a close reason that literally says "RTFM." But if you believe that trivially google-able questions (where the correct result is on page 1 on Google) have a place on Stack Overflow, then we're indeed on a different page. I'm interested in interesting questions from people with a modicum of previous knowledge and initiative, and that's the standard I expect from this site.
    – Pekka
    Commented May 5, 2014 at 1:27
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    I have no idea why any competent programmer - or someone really on the way to becoming one - would be offended by a "general reference" close reason. Who finds joy in being an unpaid mechanical turk for others? If discouraging "how to remove div in jquery" type questions is anal retentive to you, then I'm proudly anal retentive. The overzealousness that worries me has more to do with good questions on the "fluffy" side, which often don't have a minute's chance on SO any more. And the slightly flawed ones that you mention, that get plenty of downvotes and snarky comments but little help.
    – Pekka
    Commented May 5, 2014 at 1:57
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    @Pekka웃 If I'm mistaken, judging from the discussion on that thread, I don't seem to be alone or unjustified. Anyway, expanding on the jaded cops analogy, people have sympathy for cops who put their lives on the line for their work. But no one has any sympathy for a cop that's fired after being provoked into punching an agitated bum. Sure, causally speaking, taking bums off the street or somehow civilizing them would reduce the number of cops punching bums, but fundamentally the cops have to stop punching bums. It's part of their job to be civil. That's no different for moderators. Commented May 5, 2014 at 2:24
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    Show me an instance where a moderator was actually incivil to someone (like, rude) and was not reprimanded by the community or SE. Closing stuff - even downvoting stuff! - is not inherently incivil. I've seen some incidents where mods made wrongful decisions, but those that I've seen brought up on Meta were mostly resolved in a, to me, okay manner. I don't think mods are the problem, it's the development of the community standards that have become stricter and stricter.
    – Pekka
    Commented May 5, 2014 at 2:38
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    The fact that there are people who are unhappy with Stack Overflow isn't proof of anything in itself - as it can be easily countered by pointing to the 8 million questions and 42 million monthly visitors who imply that a sizeable population of visitors seems to be happy with it. It's an empty argument. That's not to say that many of those people don't have a point - they do. But we were in agreement on that some 20 comments earlier.
    – Pekka
    Commented May 5, 2014 at 3:02
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    I don't know why you keep blaming "the moderators". Stack Overflow is largely community moderated. Most of the questions that are closed are closed by regulator community members, not moderators. It isn't that I don't think the Stanford Prison Experiment is significant, it's just that I think the comparison is patently absurd. And of course, I didn't say that some people being unhappy about SO proves nothing. I asked why we should care. The argument here is that the question quality is declining, which is causing experts to lose interest and stop answering questions. What about those users?
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Commented May 6, 2014 at 7:07
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  1. I think the StackExchange network is largely responsible for the decline of SO. People got used to asking and answering weird off-topic questions and leading philosophical discussions on SE and carried it over to SO.

  2. I also feel that there is a strong focus on earning reputation as more and more employers are asking to show an "active SO profile". At the same time, the system is very far from being fair: one short answer on a good topic such as "How to undo the last Git commit" can give you several thousand upvotes. A lot of such short questions have already been asked and answered. Reputation, in effect, has already been distributed, and new users are at a disadvantage. Thus, they naturally came up with a solution: ask and answer more off-topic questions so everyone can get more reputation.

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    "People got used to asking and answering weird off-topic questions and leading philosophical discussions on SE and carried it over to SO." On which Stack Exchange site are these things promoted? The whole spirit of the Stack Exchange network is answerable, on-topic questions with focused, helpful answers. Same thing on Stack Overflow.
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Commented May 4, 2014 at 10:29
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    Also, I don't know what your experience has been, but "an active SO profile" doesn't equal "lots of reputation". It means providing lots of helpful answers. For example, I accumulate lots of reputation each day from my old answers, but I have posted very few new answers of late. Would you consider me an "active" user? I wouldn't.
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Commented May 4, 2014 at 10:30
  • @CodyGray this is promoted not by the "sites" but by brainless hot questions formula designed to work well only on large scale site like SO (maybe even only at SO) and breaking miserably at smaller / subjective-ish sites, "diluting the brand"
    – gnat
    Commented May 12, 2014 at 21:45
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Here's an example of what I described above. I saw the question

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23541653/what-is-funclet

When I saw it, I said to myself, "I'd really like to know that. I've seen the term bandied about, never knew what it means, but never took the time to ask."

I pop in to look at the answer and it's marked

  "On Hold-put on hold as unclear what you're asking "

The question is absolutely crystal clear. I was interested in hearing the answer. I presume others would as well. But a crew has jumped in to mark it on hold.

It looks like a bunch of folks trying to rack up points in C++ (normally full of softballs) see a question they cannot answer, so the knee jerk response is to put it on hold.

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    No, it's not crystal clear. Read the comments; the context is highly relevant to understanding its meaning, and without said context, a definition couldn't possibly be given. And even so, SO is not a dictionary (there are plenty of sites that are dictionaries, which would be an appropriate place to search for the definition of a term). This is not a programming problem.
    – Servy
    Commented May 8, 2014 at 15:24
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    It looks like a bunch of folks trying to rack up points in C++ (normally full of softballs) see a question they cannot answer, so the knee jerk response is to put it on hold. Putting questions on hold does not earn you reputation. Commented May 8, 2014 at 15:29
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