That begs the question: what is the definition of "everyone who codes"?
The definition is quite clear, as long as you don't nitpick about "writing code" versus "copying and pasting code". In doubt, the company has to turn the community into a product, and there's hardly something that is easier to measure than the number of users. Stir some social justice in there, and you end up with the blog posts and discussions that we already had.
Does it include those who copy code from somewhere, with no understanding of what the code does?
Then expect others to modify it to fit their special needs?
That's already happening, and seems to be an inevitable side-effect of the incentive system: Even the crappiest question will receive an answer that will be upvoted and accepted, and we all love upvotes. There is a feedback loop of bad questions that are rewarded with an answer and the answer that is rewarded with an upvote/accept. The question and answer are then somewhat "justifying" or "validating" each other.
More broadly speaking, this decay can only be controlled by the part of the community that is concerned with the quality of the site. And admittedly, I'm occasionally tempted to do something that I still criticized a few years ago: Downvote answers to (really) bad questions, even if the answer is technically valid and helpful. It might be the only way to break this cycle. This leads to the next point:
Does it mean this is now "officially" become a tutorial site and/or free code writing service?
When someone posts a homework assignment as a crappy question, there are different options:
- You can completely ignore it
- You can answer it, as a code writing service
- You can write a comment saying: "This site is not a code writing service!", downvote, and move along
- You can downvote, and move along
Where do we draw the line?
Taking a step back, I'd like to quote Hanlon's Razor *
Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
People are not intentionally writing bad questions. And people are not intentionally establishing questionable policies. That does not mean that one should naïvely assume "good intent"! But at best, people who are posting bad questions are just stupid or lazy, and people who trying to "improve" the site by incentivizing or legitimating this are just wasting some of their (and other peoples) time. Downvoting bad questions and ignoring certain parts of blog posts seem to be a viable solution (at least for me), as long as there is no profound technical evidence that certain changes to the site have any influence on the overall quality (or "welcomingness") of the site whatsoever.
* Obviously in no way related to Jay Hanlon, the author of the original "Welcoming" Blog Post