I've been a SO users for a few years, but I've only had the courage to start giving back about a year ago. Along the way, I've learned a lot about how to behave from watching other users, taking the tour, reading FAQ, getting suspended, and making my own decisions about what is good/bad for the community as a whole.
Every once in a while I feel myself getting aggravated when I see users behaving in a way that seems like gaming the system (de-prioritizing what is good for the site, for personal gain) or generally creating low-quality content on the site.
I recently had a very brief chat with @deceze about what he considered "good citizenship". I wanted to ask a highly active php
user with lots of SO experience, reputation, badges, and the moderator status was the cherry on top. If I couldn't trust his opinion, who could I trust, right?
Unfortunately, he didn't have a ready-made online document for me to digest and espouse, but he said he did have scattered posts across Meta that represented his beliefs. As I offered a few itemized scenarios that I thought were poor citizenship, he returned with his view (which was different from my view but certainly justified) and I have recalibrated my beliefs as a result.
One link that he offered in our discussion pointed to his post @ Advantage to Old Users. This talks about "magic unicorn points" relating to "trust", but then I said that I see high rep users that conduct themselves poorly. Badges may give a truer sense of citizenship, but again I don't think that these metrics can be fully relied upon either.
Although deriving my own set of beliefs after reading Meta pages is a great way to be a good, free-thinking SO citizen, it would be much more efficient if I could just trust some of the existing pillars in this community to lay down some firm points regarding what they think about quality citizenship. I don't want to know about FAQ/help pages, I've read them. I would like to hear about advice that transcends what can be done, and focus specifically on actions that should be done that have a positive site-wide cultural impact.
I'm also interested in identifying role models to emulate. When I asked deceze for suggested role models, he dropped this link on me: https://stackoverflow.com/tags/php/topusers. While there are users on that list with undoubtedly high levels of expertise, their rep points are not necessarily an indicator of the quality of their citizenship. So that I don't carry on being too vague, I see some of the users doing things like (I won't write a long list):
- Answering basic, no effort, mega-duplicates when you have tens or hundreds of thousands of rep and a gold badge in one or more of the question's tags (you know full-well that it is a hammerable duplicate).
- Commenting solutions.
- Generally making other users feel unwelcome with unconstructive interactions.
For the record, I have recently read these pages that directly or indirectly discuss matters related to SO citizenship:
- What to do when a high-rep user is willfully breaking site rules/meta consensus?
- High reputation users answering totally off-topic question
- Replace accept rate with citizenship level
- Make SO a better place for good!
- Handling “Problematic” Stack Overflow participants
- Feature needed to incentivize more positive activity mostly orthogonal to current incentives
- Could we please be a bit nicer to new users?
- What's the best way to boost my Stack Overflow score?
This is a deliberately broad question, because I don't want to accidentally exclude any good advice that you might have. It is also completely opinion-based, but this is okay for a discussion question right? Here's hoping this isn't inst-closed because this took me a long time to compose. Anyhow...
- Please offer your personal stance on prominent, frequent behaviors that represent good and/or bad citizenship, how you personally promote/combat these behaviors, why you think these are important to identify, and how successful you are with your attempts to promote/combat.
- If you consider yourself to be a good SO citizen, what does your typical "session" look like? Do you start in the Review queues? Straight to Q&A? Do you set personal goals to achieve before you go to Q&A, like: so many reviews, so many flags, revisit your old answers, etc.?
Responses don't need to be a 30-point list, I'll take a 3-point mantra if you feel strongly about your beliefs.
If anyone wants to get extreme, you could produce an online video featuring a rainbow unicorn/pony that speaks very tongue-in-cheek about good SO citizenship. Then when I see a user that is being a "poor citizen", then I can just send them to your video.
In the end, this is about refining my behavior and serving the site that has dramatically improved my coding knowledge.