Background: Feed me, Seymour!
Every SO user has an RSS feed. For example, mine can be accessed at this link:
https://stackoverflow.com/feeds/user/2057919
[Note: Anyone can view any user's feed; you do not even have to be logged in to access it.]
My feed contains, as of right now, the 30 most recent, non-deleted questions, answers, and comments that I have posted. For example, it contains these two answers that I posted recently:
<entry>
<id>https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35802758/-/35802803#35802803</id>
<re:rank scheme="http://stackoverflow.com">4</re:rank>
<title type="text">Answer by Ed Cottrell for Reading SQL Server database</title>
<author>
<name>Ed Cottrell</name>
<uri>https://stackoverflow.com/users/2057919</uri>
</author>
<link rel="alternate" href="https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35802758/reading-sql-server-database/35802803#35802803" />
<published>2016-03-04T17:50:14Z</published>
<updated>2016-03-04T18:34:59Z</updated>
<summary type="html"><p>You're missing a space in your SQL and using the brackets incorrectly. Columns need to be separated by commas. The line should be:</p>
<pre><code>string strSQL = "SELECT Id, Item FROM [dbo].[Table]";
</code></pre>
</summary>
</entry>
<entry>
<id>https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35690571/-/35690597#35690597</id>
<re:rank scheme="http://stackoverflow.com">1</re:rank>
<title type="text">Answer by Ed Cottrell for Reduce Mobile Phone reception for app testing</title>
<author>
<name>Ed Cottrell</name>
<uri>https://stackoverflow.com/users/2057919</uri>
</author>
<link rel="alternate" href="https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35690571/reduce-mobile-phone-reception-for-app-testing/35690597#35690597" />
<published>2016-02-29T01:33:41Z</published>
<updated>2016-02-29T01:33:41Z</updated>
<summary type="html"><p>One realistic way to do it is put it in a weak Faraday cage. You can make one or buy a bag or other pre-manufactured cage that protects against radio transmissions. As long as it's not <em>too</em> strong, it should weaken but not completely block the signal.</p>
</summary>
</entry>
Why do we have these feeds?
As far as I can tell, these feeds serve only one purpose: to make it easy (using a feed reader, even one built into a browser or mail client) to monitor a user's activity.
I'm not sure why we would encourage this. After all, serial voting—voting for posts on the basis of the author, not the post—is one of only a couple of reasons we (moderators and staff) invalidate votes (the other reason being sockpuppetry). These feeds basically encourage anyone looking at the feed to go vote on a post whenever the subject of the feed posts something new. Of course, all of this information about a user's activity is already available on his or her profile page. But that's different: a user who wants to see what another user has posted has to go look at the profile page. With a feed, the SO site literally feeds that information to the end user.
I can think of only two possible uses for this:
- The first, and probably the biggest, is to focus on what a particular user is doing for the purpose of voting on that user's content. Such votes based on the user, not the content of the post, cause problems; we even have an automatic script to invalidate them in most instances.
- The second is to monitor high-profile users or people associated with particular companies or products. But this implies either (1) a special case of the first use, above, or (2) a situation in which users are doing product announcements on SO, which tends to be self-promotional at best and outright spam at worst.
Let's starve the beast.
I propose that we (1) ditch these feeds or (2) make them accessible only to moderators and the user who is the subject of the feed. Making them available to the world at large seems to serve no purpose other than enabling serial/targeted voting for specific users, which is counterproductive to the site's purpose.
Another user has pointed out to me that some users may use these feeds to learn about a topic by reading posts by experts in that topic. I'd be interested to know how many people do this. My suspicion is that these users are outnumbered by people using the feeds for less honorable purposes.
/feeds/user/
url was hit 148k times on 2016-03-07 and 114k times so far today. It seems that removing this would impact a lot of users, etc./feeds/user/
- I didn't really dig any further into the data. I did a quick glance and it appeared valid, that was about it but keep in mind these numbers most likely also include crawlers, etc hitting the site.