When I first started using Stack Overflow in 2009 it was a wonderful place. High-quality questions, many of them answered in great depth by people well-known and regarded in their fields (for example, Jon Skeet).
As the years have gone on, however, questions have dropped in quality. I will leave you to read Hans Passant's great answer as to why, but the fact is that for literally half a decade, more and more low-quality questions have been posted on the site, yet the tools available to ordinary users to review and moderate those questions, have not been kept up to date.
In particular, there are various improvements - many of them quite small - that would make reviewing quicker, easier, and ultimately, take less of reviewers' time. Not only would that be more fair on reviewers, it would potentially lower the bar to entry for reviewing.
Unfortunately, since Stack Overflow is closed-source, its users are unable to add fixes directly. Thankfully, since most of us are developers, and Stack Overflow is a website, we've been able to hack work around these issues with things like Greasemonkey and its various incarnations.
But that in itself is a problem. For example, a search for "review" on Stack Apps brings back 110 results. Now, I don't expect all of those are actually user scripts, but assuming even a quarter are, is it really reasonable to ask someone to install (and debug the interactions between) 25+ scripts just to make reviewing more efficient?
This problem would not exist if Stack Overflow took feedback from those who use the review tools and actually implemented it. But they don't - fixes to the Help and Improvement queue were requested more than two and a half years ago, and promised two and a half years ago, and have not materialised. Nor has there been any communication as to why those improvements are still MIA.
That's a slap in the face to everyone who gives of their own time and effort to attempt to keep Stack Overflow's quality at a decent level.
That's why my most recent posts to Meta have been of a hostile tone. Because we reviewers have literally been asking for years for Stack Overflow to do a bare minimum of decency and implement some of these improvements, and we've consistently been ignored. If you ask nicely, if you plead, for something long enough, and you don't get it, you get upset. I'm upset, and I think I'm justified in being so.
So.
Since Stack Overflow isn't interested in prioritising improving the review queues, and those who use them are, why not allow those users to make those improvements? In other words, allow interested users to have access to the SO source code (obviously with various NDAs and other legalese to keep everything kosher).
Yes, I am aware that what I am suggesting is that the people who care the most about the site and reviews, spend even more time on the site for no compensation. Personally, I would be happy to do that because I care - but I appreciate that others might not be as willing (or happy to allow Stack Overflow to abrogate its responsibilities as it has been doing), hence this discussion.
Review queues are the only facet of Stack Overflow that I now actively participate in. If they don't get fixed - or we aren't allowed to fix them - I will no longer have any reason to use the site.
Is that being butthurt and/or unreasonable? Perhaps. But I feel like if one of the small percentage of users who actually contribute to the site's quality is no longer interested in doing so, and Stack Overflow itself isn't interested in addressing that, then Stack Overflow no longer cares about quality.
And that means it's no better than Experts Exchange. Or, in short, that Stack Overflow has failed entirely at everything it was created for.
Additional reading: Stack Overflow fatigue - has your usage / motivation dropped off? (with a still-relevant answer in this vein from me), On large communities decaying over time, being nice or mean, and Stack Overflow (with another great answer from Hans).
cool, Stack Overflow is dead and staying in its coffin, no point in holding out any hope that the initial vision remains
I wouldn't quite put it that way; as said, the site is still working amazingly well and it's still the #1 resource for programming Q&A. But in terms of taking the site forward with bold steps, addressing problems with risky changes, the way it used to be in Atwood days, that might be dead, yeah. At least I'm not seeing anything in that regard and I've been waiting for a while. Too much money & too many livelihoods involved maybe.