People frequently rant about how Stack Overflow's draconian rules stink, too many questions get closed, etc.
Regardless of where one stands on that argument, those people often complain that they ended up at a closed question through Google. Recent example
That seems a valid point.
If we don't allow resource requests or list questions, why is...
This one (also closed) the #4 result for
Visual C# Express download
and #8 forvisual c# download
?This one (also closed) #4 for
best c# ide
?
This is bound to lead tons of people (290,000 views between the last two examples alone) to a question that likely contains stale content, or none at all, and can no longer be answered.
That is actively making the web a slightly worse place. No?
Is hiding closed questions* from the Google bot technically feasible?
If it is: why is SO not doing it?
* = There'd have to be the obvious exceptions: Questions closed as duplicates, and questions with a historical lock.
The middle one isn't stale
fair enough - although I don't like the fact that it shows up forvisual c# download
. The reasoning is that SO has huge search engine juice, and closed worthless questions push others (which are actually useful) off the results page. In an ideal world, we'd delete all the non-useful closed questions, but I don't think we're even remotely there.