For the past few years, we've been following a very well formed system for burnination based on Shog's long-term vision. The system has been very successful, and we have managed to complete many burninations successfully. However, while going through the meta posts on burnination proposals, I realized that the present system does not encompass all the questions. There are few posts where we, as a community, have no idea what we have to do. Check out this table:
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| Score | 50+ questions | <50 questions |
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| 20+ | Use Burn process | Do it directly yourself |
| 0 - 20 | | Do it with top-user help|
| < 0 | declined | declined |
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We can now clearly see that there's a hole in the process which we are following. There are 233 questions which are scored between 0 and 20, and most of them fall into that gaping hole left in the burninate system.
What do you think would be the most effective way to handle the burnination requests which do not have a high enough score to follow the complete burnination process or are too small to take care of it ourselves?
"Do nothing and wait", seems a straightforward answer, but most of these are already many years old. Newer requests are being marked as duplicates of older ones which will never be heard of again. Most of the newer users would not know what the situation was back then, which prompted the request. Adding a [status-] tag to these would be very effective in not making users blame denvercoder9.
A few things to be kept in mind are:
- adding a status-declined on a burninate-request doesn't mean it is rejected outright for the rest of eternity. We can always recreate a status-declined burninate request, if the times have changed.
- burninations take up a lot of our community's time, make sure you propose something which we all want to spend time on. (extending the present complete system to cover the <20-scored posts is not practical. With the current set of requests and no more, we need nearly 3 years to complete just those scored >20)
x
but the action time could take longer. And so long as the action hasn't been taken yet, the request should be considered active.