The blog post Welcome Wagon: Classifying Comments on Stack Overflow has brought out both sides of the "too welcoming"/"not welcoming enough" debate. I've noticed every time this is brought up, there's some group of existing users who decide (or as least posture) that they'll simply walk away from difficult users to avoid being unwelcoming.
The most recent example I've seen is from Is this really what we should consider "unwelcoming"?:
Please tell me what we're supposed to be doing instead then. Walk away and don't provide any help at all rather than call a spade a spade?
This was from a >100k user; not a user I'd want to opt out of comments. Personally, I would find this far more harmful to the site than being unwelcoming. However, this all depends of whether or not there is data which suggests high-rep users have been commenting less frequently on new posts in the recent few months as Stack Exchange has fleshing out a better idea on how welcoming to be.
If there's been no observable change, my point is moot.
If there has, however, then it may be worth a discussion on where a balance lies between being welcoming while still encouraging our most helpful users to contribute. I'll table that discussion for now.
As it stands, I was wondering if we have been able to observe detrimental changes in the commenting behavior of high rep users (or any helpful user, I'm just not sure a better metric to use. Users who comment most often, maybe?)
NOTE: Please don't rehash this debate in the comments. I'm only after objective data here.