Recently there has been a very useful discussion about how to better moderate rude comments. Most of the discussion there has focused on flagging, deleting comments, warning users when their comments have been flagged, etc. (This feature request began as an answer on that question.)
These are all moderation efforts premised on the continued existence of the comment UI as it currently exists. However, a comment by Shog9 resonated with me:
Fwiw, the level of false negatives is high for all comment flag types; relatively few comments get flagged period, even when they unarguably should be. There are too many comments. – Shog9♦ 2 days ago
(Emphasis added.)
There are too many comments!
Stack Overflow has dealt for many years with the "problem" of too many questions and has built up a huge array of UI designed to increase the friction of asking in ways that guide people toward higher quality questions.
In addition to the moderation techniques discussed, I wonder if we should also consider a complete redesign of the question comment UI to make it harder to leave comments and to use a much heavier hand in guiding users toward good comments.
Comments under questions are primarily intended for one purpose: to elicit clarifications on questions to make them clearer and more answerable. The current UI does almost nothing to guide users toward that end.
Consider some of the following hypotheticals:
- The text link under a question should read "request a clarification" not "add a comment". This is such a simple and easy thing that could reframe the user's mind toward the purpose of a "comment". The subsequent button should be labelled "post your request" not "add comment", etc.
- The text box shown to the user could be pre-populated with a prompt, geared toward a polite request for more information, e.g. "Could you please provide more information about" with the cursor placed at the end. The user could remove the prompt, but again it adds more friction.
- If there are pre-existing "comments" the user could be forced to move through a dialog box first giving them the option to simply up-voting an existing "comment". Again, the user would be able to dismiss the dialog, but more friction.
- The asker could be shown a "clarify question" text with no option to leave their own comment. That linked text could take them directly to the question editing UI, annotated with the clarification requests and prompts to address them directly in the question text.
- Miscellaneous: smaller tweaks might include removing the ability to @ users other than the asker in comments and reducing the character maximum.
I am far from a UI design expert, so take all that more in the spirit of a general idea than the specifics. The point would be make it much less appealing to add comments in general and to use a much heavier hand to funnel users toward leaving a specific kind of comment only.
There would be costs to this kind of change. This kind of UI design would essentially kill any sort of back-and-forth in the comments that might in some circumstances be useful to flesh out the question. It would make it much less appealing to leave a minimal "answer stub" in the comments, but I think we should be discouraging that in any case. I'm sure there are other downsides that I haven't thought of...
I've focused here solely on the idea of redesigning the comment UI under questions only. The comments under answers are used differently enough that I think they would require different treatment. Also, comments on Meta are very different as well, so UI changes probably shouldn't be made there.