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The sheer amount of off-topic questions on Stack Overflow is absolutely mind-boggling. The Stack Overflow QA model is supposed to promote quality questions and answers, but the off-topic QA's are deteriorating the content.

In my opinion, all off-topic questions, especially the ones that can't be moved to Server Fault, Security, etc. for whatever reason should be completely removed from the Stack Overflow site and points/achievements/reputation gained from answers subtracted from both the OP's and answerer's account.

Example: What's the difference between "grep -e" and "grep -E" from 2013.

Why does this question still exist? It's already been closed as off-topic. Once it's deemed off-topic, shouldn't it automatically be deleted?

I also found dozens of others in less than 5 minutes that are blatantly off-topic, but they haven't even been flagged yet - and to find and flag all of them would be a full-time job!

Maybe a fair deterrent for posting off-topic questions could be a subtraction of user points or a change in user achievements, reputation, etc. once a question has been flagged off-topic.

Short of that, a huge popup that asks new users until N amount of questions have been asked, "Are you sure this is a programming question?" Or maybe a little AI that evaluates the content of the question and suggests the proper Stack Exchange sub-site.

Since Stack Overflow is so rife with an insurmountable amount of clutter, I think it's worthwhile to discuss strategies to deter and remove questions that don't belong (on a larger scale).

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    Questions are removed all the time. And reputation gained from deleted questions (or answers posted to deleted questions) is already removed.
    – yivi
    Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 8:40
  • Closed questions with low views and low score get automatically deleted anyway Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 9:40
  • @WhatsThePoint see my modified question with an example
    – Sosukodo
    Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 9:40
  • @Sosukodo I did, even though something is off topic does not mean it is useful, closing the question just stops new answers going on to off topic posts, like I said in my previous comment, low scoring/viewed questions are deleted automatically Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 9:42
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    Re: automatically deleted closed question; roomba. Re: "I also found dozens of others in less than 5 minutes that are blatantly off-topic but haven't even been flagged yet - and to find and flag all of them would be a full-time job!", you're right, we're all just volunteers here. Re: "a fair deterrent for posting off-topic questions" user with many negative-score closed/deleted questions are already automatically banned from asking questions. Re: "Are you sure ... ?"; "Ask a question" wizard
    – Andrew T.
    Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 9:49
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    Yes they should, but people answering and those answers being upvoted tend to get in the way of a swift cleanup.
    – Gimby
    Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 11:20

1 Answer 1

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No. If they are good - having a positive score - then they are worthy content, despite their offtopic-ness.

They serve also as signposts to show, what type of questions are off-topic on the site. Their removal wouldn't make this example.

But the real reason is that the site won't remove good content, which is imho quite understable.

Closed questions with a negative score are automatically deleted by the Community user in 9, 30 or 365 days (I can dig out the link to the detailed rules from the MSE for ask).

However, the correct way would be to migrate the posts to the site where they are on-topic, instead of deleting anything. Unfortunately, the SE somehow won't do it.

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  • However, the correct way would be to migrate the posts to the site where they are on-topic, instead of deleting anything. Unfortunately, the SE somehow won't do it. You know that you can flag for migration? And that they are migrated when the target site accepts them?
    – BDL
    Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 13:49
  • @BDL I know and I do it regularly, however it is not a very well-known thing. This results that many posts get an unfair treatment (closure, deletion), resulting a disappointed user about a single SE site. A migrated post means typically a satisfied user knowing already 2 SE sites. This is why do I think, that migrating posts is generally a good thing, particularly in comparison with the other options (closure, downs, deletion).
    – peterh
    Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 14:00
  • I agree with that. But your statement claims that migrations are not happening because SE doesn't want to. I'd say it isn't happening 50% because users don't flag for migration and 50% because the other sites don't want our waste.
    – BDL
    Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 14:01
  • @BDL The SE wants to minimize the migrations, if you don't believe it, then look for that on the MSE, I am now not in the mood to collect links for well-known facts.
    – peterh
    Commented Feb 22, 2019 at 14:27

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