No!
Questions on Stack Overflow aren't supposed to age away into obscurity, with people ignoring them because they are old.
If that were the case, why marr them with some kind of indicator? Why not just delete them outright and save everyone even the 3 seconds they'd consume processing the visual indicator?
Because there's nothing wrong with old questions! There's no reason to ignore them. You can browse them, read them, learn from them, edit them, improve them, answer them, and a whole host of other things, all without holding your nose. In fact, our model encourages you to do so.
It is very confusing and concerning to me that you appear to have sentiments that differ from this.
I spend a couple minutes reading the question, comments, and answer before I realize that this question is over 3 years old.
So what? If it is a good question that was well-answered, then this was not time wasted. If it had not been well-answered, then that's a prime opportunity for you—post an answer! Of course, if it's a bad question, then I guess it does kind of waste your time. But that's not unique to its being old. It would be just as much a waste of time if it were brand new. We have a way of dispatching such questions: we downvote them, close them, and ultimately delete them. All questions are eligible for and should receive this treatment when appropriate, regardless of their age.
In this case, I'll grant that you did come across a bad question. It looks like it did waste your time (and now you've wasted all our time by forcing us to look at it :-p), and I'm sorry to hear that. But when you come across stuff like this, you need to help us by taking action against it. Since you've brought it to the attention of Meta users, it's been downvoted and closed. You could have spurred this process along yourself when you came across it by simply voting to close it yourself.
Now, just so that I'm not misunderstood, I'll say it again: it would be very nice if we could find a way to prevent bad questions from getting posted that we have to waste our time reading and dispatching. But that has nothing to do with age, and everything to do with quality. There tons of high-quality questions with excellent answers that are over 3 years old. I know, because every time I write code, it seems like I have Stack Overflow open on one of my screens, reading awesome answers that help me to arrive at solutions to problems I'm experiencing. I don't look at the date, I look at the content.
I would like to request that old questions that get bumped display a highlighted banner indicating their age and what caused the bump. This will allow me to more easily evaluate if I should pay attention to it.
Bumps can only be caused by a few things:
- Initial posting.
- Editing.
- The posting of a new answer.
- The post being reopened.
All of those three things are "interesting" activity, and we want other users to notice that they've occurred. That is the only way you can determine whether that activity was legitimate or not, and that is key to our community moderation model. If you see a poor quality question get posted, you have the tools to help dispose of it. If you see a bad answer posted, you should downvote it and potentially flag it for disposal. If you see a bad edit get made, you have the tools to roll it back and undo the harm.
If you only want to see "new" questions, we have a place you can do that. Click the "Questions" tab, and then sort by "newest". In other words, click here. You won't see anything that's been bumped for any reason but #1: a brand new question being posted for the first time.
Bonus Chatter: The only case in which I would support this is for really old questions that no longer meet our guidelines. The ones we have since closed, but haven't deleted because they contain valuable information that might still be of use to people. We had a big debate a few years ago about what to do with these questions. You can find it if you care by searching on https://meta.stackexchange.com/ (the Meta site we used before this one unique to Stack Overflow was created).
Some people wanted to just delete them outright (and many, indeed, were deleted), others wanted to leave the information accessible. But we all pretty much agreed that the questions needed to be closed and that we didn't want people looking at them and getting the wrong impression about what types of questions are allowed on Stack Overflow.
A compromise was reached, where we lock these questions for posterity. The content is all still available, but they cannot be interacted with. This is called a historical lock. The current implementation hides the voting arrows and puts a gray banner on the page (similar to the "closed" banner), but doesn't otherwise make it particularly obvious that there is something special about the question.
There were proposals then (I think one of them was mine, but certainly Will had an idea similar to this) to make these questions visually distinct in an impossible-to-miss way. I think that's a perfectly valid suggestion, but it would only apply to historically locked questions that are basically dancing on the edge of the deletion cliff. It is not appropriate for normal questions just because they're old.
:P