It's been about 5 months since we started testing Triage. There've been a fair number of hiccups, and there's still plenty of work to be done refining the criteria, but at this point I think the process is working pretty well: with over 1800 questions reviewed every day on average (over 20% of all questions asked), these dedicated reviewers tirelessly sort a huge number of questions into categories that make them easier for the rest of us to deal with.
Some quick stats:
50% of questions triaged as Looks OK actually get answered - while only 9% end up with a negative score.
73% of questions triaged as Unsalvageable get closed and/or deleted, while only 2% end up with a positive score.
29% of questions triaged as Should Be Improved get closed and/or deleted, and 33% get answered.
It's that last category I want to address... It is, as it was intended to be, a sort of limbo: no immediate action results from such categorization, but rather the question waits for some sort of intervention to save or damn it. Questions put there run the gamut from merely poorly-written to deeply-flawed. We do offer tools to help folks salvage such questions, but that still requires a lot of skill and care - many questions, particularly those where the original author is absent or uncooperative, simply won't make it.
David Fullerton had an analogy for this that I like quite a bit: he compared these questions to objects drifting down a river, with folks standing on the shore with poles dragging in what looked interesting to them.
Eventually, anything of value would be either claimed or washed out to sea. Right now, with the cooperation of a large number of reviewers in the Help and Improvement queue, roughly a third of these questions are hooked in by someone on shore...
...The rest should meet the Kraken.
I propose the following criteria for automatically deleting these questions, based on those for the automatic deletion of abandoned, closed questions:
- Triaged as "Should Be Improved" more than 9 days ago
- Score <= 0
- Not closed
- Not locked
- No answers with a score > 0
- No accepted answer
- No edits in the past 9 days
If you're interested in seeing what this would catch, here's a SEDE query.
Play around with this a bit, if you would - I'm not seeing a lot of stuff worth keeping here, but it's likely that I'm missing something; if you've suggestions for better criteria for this, post 'em below.