After years in C#, I'm learning C++, and naturally I often turn to Stack Overflow to help me figure out how to do things.
Many common Stack Overflow C++ questions have answers from the site's beginning in 2008. These naturally come up first in Google since they have the most links by now, nine years later.
Since then, C++11 and C++14 have come out, and C++17 is right around the corner. The best way to do something in C++ in 2008 might not be the best way anymore. Stack Overflow might be producing a lot of C++ novices who are writing bad C++ (in ways that used to be good C++, but are now obsolete).
As a C++ novice myself, I don't yet have the aptitude to tell when an answer is recommending an obsolete approach. I fear that if I write a question and ask for a better way, I'll get the dreaded "This question already has an answer here" closure. I've seen the suggestion of offering a bounty on the original question, but I don't have the experience to know whether the answer actually is outdated.
What can be done about this problem so that Stack Overflow remains a great Q & A site for C++ instead of a repository of outdated information?