In connection with the fifth anniversary of Aaron Swartz's death, there is a discussion on Hacker News that goes like this:
codeulike says:
This StackOverflow question from Aaron about using rsync to download and copy lots of files is like a piece of history frozen in time. keep rsync from removing unfinished source files.
meagar says:
Please remember that Stack Overflow does not welcome any kind of meta commentary about a question's author in that question's comments or answers.
switch007 says:
And of course someone added a revision just now, for some minor style tweaks.
klez says:
Also, the editor is a SO moderator
Here is the edit in question.
I think all of the above raises important questions:
- Should questions or answers be locked when a person dies?
- Should there be some sort of status indicator beside the name of a dead user?
I propose this solution:
- When a user dies, other users on the site should be able to mark the user as
potentially gone
. This could be done with a form where options could be: "I know this person is dead", "I believe this person is gone", "I know this person will not come back to Stackoverflow", but the status set on the user would still bepotentially gone
. - The
potentially gone
status is hidden to everyone but users that are moderators. Or it could be visible to users that have a certain amount of points. - A moderator should be able to remove the
potentially gone
status. - If the user has not logged in after two years, and the user has been marked as
potentially gone
, the account is marked ashistorical
. - Accounts that are marked as
historical
have a little clock right next to the username. If the clock is clicked, a short explanation that the user appears to be gone shows up. There is no need to go into details for why the user is gone, there is no need to claim that the person is dead or not.
To sum it up, these are the two new user statuses I propose:
potentially gone
historical
And posts from historical
users should not be editable.
one benefit would be to know if you could expect to get an answer from that user, ever
You already don't have a guarantee you will receive an answer from any user you interact with. Loads and loads of users, alive and well but rude people that they are, never respond to answers or requests for clarification. The good thing about the way Stack Overflow is designed is that, differently from, say, Facebook, this doesn't matter as much - anyone else with something meaningful to add can jump in at any moment.if a user has been gone for two years, are there really valid edits that have not been made in those two years, that could be made?
absolutely. Technologies evolve; a new product or library may have been published; someone may have worked out a solution to a problem in the meantime... that's the whole point of Stack Overflow's editing system.There has to be some user-management, even when Q&A is the focus.
I'm still not seeing a powerful argument why, though. Deaths of prominent users are arguably a rare exception that can be perfectly handled manually by moderator intervention - something that would probably be needed even if this feature existed.