Apparently we have all been the objects of a scientific study:
Many online platforms such as Yahoo! Answers and GitHub rely on users to voluntarily provide content. What motivates users to contribute content for free however is not well understood.
In this paper, we use a revealed preference approach to show that career concerns play an important role in user contributions to Stack Overflow, the largest online Q&A community. We investigate how activities that can enhance a user’s reputation vary before and after the user finds a new job. We contrast this with activities that do not help in enhancing a user’s reputation.
After finding a new job, users contribute 25% less in reputation-generating activity on Stack Overflow. By contrast, they reduce their non-reputation-generating activity by only 8% after finding a new job. These findings suggest that users contribute to Stack Overflow in part because they perceive this as a way to improve future employment prospects.
We provide direct evidence against alternative explanations such as integer constraints, skills mismatch, and dynamic selection effects. The results also suggest that, beyond altruism, career concerns play an important role in explaining voluntary contributions on Stack Overflow.
Thats the abstract of "What Makes Geeks Tick? A Study of Stack Overflow Careers", a paper by economists Lei Xu, Tingting Nian and Luís Cabral. If you want a TL;DR of the abstract, I think the last sentence is the interesting take home message here: "users contribute to Stack Overflow in part because they perceive this as a way to improve future employment prospects".
My question to you all is this: Do you think the conclusion is correct, in general as well for yourself personally? I know this will only be a collection of anecdotes that hardly trumps the hard data, but it would still be interesting to hear some thoughts about this paper.
they want to push more geek buttons and get them to solve their problems for free
this should be framed.