The situation
Today I saw another one in the slew and endless torrent of meta questions about "why have I been question banned?". As usual, it was closed as a duplicate of this FAQ entry.
Standard fare for a Tuesday morning on meta.SO.
Out of curiosity, I decided to check up on it again, as it's been a long time since I've read it. What I found was a little disconcerting.
As I understand it, the purpose and goal of this FAQ entry is to give question banned users the information they need to unban themselves. This post is heavily referenced whenever the topic of a question ban comes up and is viewed by many-a-user who would like their posting privileges back.
I think, to that end, that it doesn't serve its purpose very well.
The introduction
Right away, it starts off with this:
Why am I getting this message?
As stated in the about links on every page, Stack Exchange is a network of question and answer sites, not help forums. This implies that all posts are expected to have value for later visitors, in addition to helping the asker. To enforce that, and to prevent help vampires from making the answerers turn away from the community, low-quality questions and answers are blocked. This includes posts from:
- users who can't be bothered to form sentences
- users who don't do the most basic kinds of research themselves
- users who barely even explain what it is they are trying to do
Now, this is pretty confrontational. It may be earned (the user did earn their ban after all), but it's likely not going to effect behavior change. This post is making an argument to the user about the expectations this site has of them, referring to "Help Vampires" and "users who can't be bothered to form sentences" or "users who don't do the most basic kinds of research themselves" or "users who barely even explain what it is they are trying to do" can serve to put readers on the defensive "I'm not that bad, surely!" and cause them to fail to consider what we need them to understand to get unbanned.
I think these points are all needlessly confrontative.
Suggested Edits
First off, I think the blip about help vampires is unuseful and not really needed anymore. Any behavior that would fall under "Help Vampire" is covered in another point of the list already - duplicating the meaning in a catchphrase that can come across as insulting is unnecessary
Secondly, I think the bullet points could use reworking to be less dismissive and confrontative.
Something like:
This includes posts from:
- users who insufficiently describe their question or don't take enough time to properly formulate.
- users who don't do enough research of their own before asking
- users who don't provide enough detail for their question to be answerable
Again, the goal of the post (to my understanding) isn't to let the banned user know just how crap they are at asking questions but to effect change in behavior. To that end, it serves better to be friendly but direct rather than dismissive.
Further ideas
I also think that it might be of use to reorder the structure of the FAQ - helpful tidbits like where to find your deleted posts or over the nature of the question ban should come after the paragraph on how to get out of it.