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tl;dr: I own the domain name StackOverflowOverflow.com. I cannot build something good for the community with it, and I want to gift it to someone who has an idea that will benefit the Stack Overflow community.

History

Yesterday, 9 years ago, Tom Ritter registered stackoverflowoverflow.com with the intention of creating a discussion site for topics and discussion styles that didn't fit the Stack Overflow paradigm. Less than a year later Meta was created, replacing UserVoice, and Tom gave stackoverflowoverflow.com to me to use it to allow discussion of slightly offtopic Stack Overflow questions. Over time I attempted this, first with Stack Exchange 1.0, then suggesting a site via Area 51, but the first was a failure as the system didn't support the needed migration/import functionality, and the second because the community that formed around the site wanted something substantially different (and they formed a great, useful site - just not what was intended, taking a hard turn during site beta).

I can't do it

Over the last six years I've watched as Stack Exchange Inc became a more socially and politically active company, and I've reduced my participation each time they attempted to deputize the community into becoming advocates for their specific social and political views, most which are shared by less than half the US, and little of the rest of the world. Recent decisions and policy reaffirm that they are intentionally pursuing an activist organization and community, and are now resolved on forcing the community into compliance with their voice on all network sites. This question isn't about this larger, intractable issue, but I wanted to provide context for my decision to leave and the dispossession of this domain.

Since it looks like it's time to let go of this part of my life I expect someone else can do more with this domain than I would be able to.

As Tom Ritter did 8 years ago:

Do you want it?

Would anyone like to pick up the cost of renewal and keep the domain? If not, it will probably go into domain limbo in 2019 and get auto-registered by a squatter.

On the off chance there're multiple people who would like it, post your idea, and I'll gift it to whichever one everyone likes best.

Intention

My intention is to find a use that would benefit Stack Overflow and its users. It's free. I could go ahead and do a number of things with it, but none of those possibilities sits well with me. It was gifted to me because it could be something useful for the community to use. Maybe even a simple Discourse server would be enough to provide something Stack Overflow cannot and never will. I don't know - all I do know is that I'm not going to be able to do that for the community.

Perhaps someone else can, and giving it away for free to whomever has the idea the community most likes seems like a good way to ensure it's a benefit to the community - not a drag, and not a target.

This isn't a domain sale to the general public - I'm posting this question in the hopes that the community will come up with some interesting ideas worth trying, and someone will put forth the effort to test one or more possible uses.

I want it to benefit the Stack Overflow community.

Be aware: now that Stack Exchange Inc is a Real Company™ with Real Lawyers™ and Real Investors™ they may choose at any time to enforce their trademark. At the time the domain was created it was a very friendly and community oriented company, willing to allow users a great deal of latitude, but they may no longer have the legal freedom to allow this sort of thing to continue. Caveat emptor.

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    I think the bigger story is that we're losing a long time user, because they perceive that Stack Overflow has strayed from the goal of just being a programming question and answer site.
    – mason
    May 1, 2018 at 17:10
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    @RobertHarvey The blog post was pretty clear that they want feedback from the community. Wouldn't a long time user deciding to leave due to recent events be just that sort of feedback? I get that it's off-topic, but it's exactly the sort of wake-up message that SE needs to be hearing, instead of trying to hide it away and pretend like non-users matter and experienced users don't.
    – mason
    May 1, 2018 at 18:05
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    @mason: The blog post also, above all else, talks about how we should communicate things. This post is not a stellar example. It's mostly a ragequit. May 1, 2018 at 18:07
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    @RobertHarvey You're continuing to miss the point: users believe that Stack Overflow is losing its core mission. They're here to do programming questions and answers. That's it. They feel like SE is deviating from that, and they're leaving and they want SE to know why. You can call it a rage quit if you want, the end result is the same: a person that has contributed quite a bit over the years is leaving.
    – mason
    May 1, 2018 at 18:13
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    @mason: And you're continuing to miss the point as well. This post is ironically illustrative of what happens when a community member skirts along the edges of policy. If people don't want to "fit in" and decide to leave by their own personal choice, it's their right and privilege to do so. May 1, 2018 at 18:17
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    At least give Adam a chance to find a new home for this domain before he stops paying for it. (Or he could use the contact form instead, if that makes everyone feel better...)
    – BoltClock
    May 1, 2018 at 18:20
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    @RobertHarvey A long time user announcing that they're leaving, and giving their feedback as to why they're doing so, shouldn't qualify as skirting along the edge of policy. I "see" the irony you think I'm missing, I just don't agree that it's ironic.
    – mason
    May 1, 2018 at 18:23
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    @mason: Sure. Just make sure you're providing a reasonably accurate characterization. Here's mine: "I disagree with how SE runs things, and I am leaving. By the way, wanna buy my domain name I created as an alternate forum for disenfranchised users?" C'mon. May 1, 2018 at 18:25
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    @RobertHarvey Sure, that's a fair enough description. I just think that we should be smart enough people to recognize the actual value in the post. Honestly, I don't care that he's selling a domain, and probably most others don't either. But several experienced users lately have been expressing their dissatisfaction with SE recently, and some have discussed leaving. Well, here's an example of it. Does SE keep track of active users that leave? Conduct an exit interview/survey? Because in my opinion, we should be far more worried about losing experienced users than a few dissatisfied non-users.
    – mason
    May 1, 2018 at 18:30
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    Dismiss as ragequit, but this and others seem more like sadquits to me. May 1, 2018 at 23:07
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    @ChuckLeButt: there is a political view that treating people decently is in itself political. I don't speak for Adam, and he may wish to clarify for himself, but some American right-wingers think that helping disadvantaged/marginalised groups is politically liberal or left-leaning. Personally I think that some of the responses we have seen recently (including leaving) are a gross over-reaction, and probably a serious misunderstanding of the blog pot that started all this. But, hey-ho, we are where we are.
    – halfer
    May 1, 2018 at 23:17
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    You can do like I do with stackoverfiow.com; a good troll to misdirect people. see this relevant meta post. May 1, 2018 at 23:22
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    @halfer I think the point you're missing is that this is not to do with fluffy issues like the most recent blog post, but about explicitly political interventions by Stack Overflow management like this, this, and this, all of which were controversial.
    – IMSoP
    May 2, 2018 at 9:13
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    @MarkAmery your comment reminds me of something that I've been wondering for a while. Could we all please stop considering treating humans with dignity as "leftist activism"? It should be clear that respecting human dignity is apolitical and it's not like the "right wing people" are some kind of monsters with no regard to other people. If someone disregards the dignity and rights of fellow humans, the problem is not that they disagree with "leftists", they are the problem. May 2, 2018 at 12:15
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    @AndreaLazzarotto I (and everyone else who is to the right of Stack Exchange, Inc. on social justice issues, which is evidently most of the community) do not consider what is being asked of us by Stack Exchange to amount to "treating humans with dignity". If we did, we wouldn't be objecting to it. "Treating humans with dignity" does not require relaxing our moderation standards, nor accepting a narrative about women or non-whites in which they are generally unable to cope with criticism that white men would easily tolerate. We don't think the former is a good idea, nor the latter true.
    – Mark Amery
    May 2, 2018 at 12:35

2 Answers 2

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I think it would be fun for that domain to be a 2d physics-based visualization of the stack overflow questions that are being posted. When a user hits the site the screen will populate with the most recent however many questions (maybe five or ten), and each question will be represented with a block, and as new questions are posted, they are dropped onto the pile until the whole screen just fills up with questions.

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    What’s going on now? The site fails to load, on my phone at least. Oct 5, 2019 at 22:25
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If no one else steps up, I can have this domain redirect to stackoverflow.proboards.com (or similar) and set up a forum there.

I'm still not sure what kinds of discussion would go on there, but I could envision a new topics board where people could propose uses for it, and then those might graduate to actual boards on the forum.

Thoughts?

+1 or -1 for the new topics idea?

Antother thing I'm wondering is how this will differ from the idea of a third place that SO chat already covers.

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    Looks like the community has spoken, let's not do the free-for-all on topics.
    – NH.
    May 3, 2018 at 16:03

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