There are cases where false beliefs are widely held, even among expert developers. Social opinion dynamics results in the propagation of such false beliefs and leads to repeated wrong answers on SO, which receive many upvotes. I'd like to point out one such case: the question Aggregation versus Composition, with the five highest-ranked answers all repeating the same wrong opinion. I added my answer only about six years later, in an attempt to correct all these wrong answers. For getting the attention of the respondents, trying to start discussions with them, I downvoted their wrong answers and left a comment for them.
Instead of considering the issue and discussing it with me or immediately improving their answers, most of them simply ignored my discussion/elucidation attempt and one of them even revenge-downvoted my answer. In addition. SO moderators deleted all my comments, apparently perceiving my attempt to correct a long-standing false belief as the action of a grumbler.
So, what are the conclusions from this story?
- An important question about conceptual understanding has been left with all top-ranked answers being wrong.
- SO moderators didn't promote the disussion of my criticism, but rather oppressed it.
- SO does not have any mechanism for correcting wrong, but popular opinions. So it will stay with all these wrong answers and continue to promote the underlying false beliefs.