I would tend to oppose the proposal as written, for a couple of reasons. The roomba rule is intended to delete questions that are valueless. Old questions with no answers are almost by definition valueless since they have no answer. In fact they tend to subtract value by attracting "Me Too" answers that clog up the review queue. But we cannot necessarily conclude an answered question is valueless beyond a reasonable doubt simply from the up- and down-votes.
Firstly, if the question is answered, then the answerer themself thought the question was valuable enough to spend time writing up their post. And if the answer is accepted, then the questioner thought the answer was valuable. Both the answer and its acceptance are a kind of implicit upvote for the thread that the proposed rule does not take into account.
Secondly, in obscure areas such as, say, datacontractjsonserializer, jsonpath, autocad, teigha or whatever, the proposed rule would seem to give one cranky downvoter too much power to delete content. E.g. a question could be asked and answered about DataContractJsonSerializer
and then both could collect a downvote from someone who also comments, Use Json.NET instead it's recommended by Microsoft. Since the topic is obscure the downvotes might never get offset, causing a "mass cleanout" of answered questions on niche technologies that nevertheless are valuable to those communities.
What's worse, in both scenarios, if the questioner and answerer(s) were low-rep users at the time, they would have been unable to vote no matter how valuable they found each others contributions.
Hypothetically we could modify the proposal by adding an additional filter that treats each answer and the acceptance of an answer as an implicit upvote:
- has a net score calculated by
(net votes for the question and all answers) + (number of answers) + (1 if an answer is accepted) < -1
For example, I took Shog9's query, sorted it in order of descending question score, and grabbed the "least bad" in my area of expertise: C# marshaling C struct. It's a sort of obscure optimization question involving marshaling where the main complaint seems to be that the optimization is unnecessary in the questioner's scenario. But the question isn't completely valueless as the optimization might be useful in more "extreme" situations -- in fact Hans Passant's comment to that effect may be the most valuable thing there.
Under the proposed rule this question would get deleted, but with the additional net score filtering it would not, because the presence of the answer and the acceptance of the answer add two implicit upvotes producing a net score of 0
.
On the other hand the lowest-scoring question in my area is Largest and smallest random number C# (-5 with -2 answer, not accepted)... yeah, that looks totally deletable. And it easily gets deleted under both the proposed rule and my modification.
But still there's that magic net score cutoff of -1
. Should it be 0
? -2
? How can we decide? And if we can't decide on a cutoff number for identifying valueless content beyond a reasonable doubt, I'm not sure we should be doing it at all.