This seems to be happening a bit more frequently than it used to, but it's still a fairly exceptional situation. I've referred to it as "lead boots" when talking about it with moderators and internally on product discussions.
Here's the scenario:
User posts a few questions that are off-topic in a manner that no amount of editing will ever fix. Sometimes people post several of these at once. We've been around for a while, but our rules are kind of quirky when it comes to questions that ask for book or library recommendations. While it is documented, new users miss a fair chunk of the reading we make available for help.
All of the questions end up getting downvoted. Some might get an answer or two. The OP gets a little overwhelmed and deletes stuff. So now you have a perfect storm of:
- More than a couple of questions, with very little time between them
- Post history records indicating deletion
- A very negative average score
- Maybe one or two edits (more on that later)
... and at that point the user has gone from zero straight past the rolling rate limits that are designed to slow people down. They went completely over the guard rail and right down to the bottom of the ravine. That's closer to a year than mere months or weeks in most cases.
They can't edit any of their questions because no amount of editing is going to make a library recommendation question on-topic. The user is basically stuck until the most downvoted and deleted question falls out of scope of the advanced block query.
If they edit their posts, the rolling limit system will acknowledge the effort, even if the edit didn't result in upvotes or re-opening. Thus, if:
- The question has no answers
- The OP has an on-topic question they could put in place of the one they asked
- The OP makes an edit and it's well-received / re-opened
... they can pull themselves out of the long-term block and then the rolling limits will politely tell them that they need to wait (n) days before they can ask another question (which I think is reasonable).
That's hacky as all get-out!
I know. We need to fix the system surrounding this because conditions that were once "perfect storms" unlikely to repeat are becoming more common. But, while we do that, I want to let everyone know George is right that there's no real harm if the question has no answers. And, it's not helping people circumvent restrictions. Think of it as seeing a car fly over a guardrail and land in a ravine. But it's a Matchbox car, so you can just pick it up again, put it on the road, and let it slam into the guard rail instead.
That's a terrible analogy and why we really need to get this sorted, but work on that front starts at the input itself (where folks ask) while we iterate and study outcomes, and then look at how big of a problem we have left.
Ideally, we can get rid of the long-term advanced block and just use the rolling rate limits going forward. Users can always help themselves out of rolling limits. Hard blocks require a CM to get involved and lifting them quite often just isn't possible.
Having someone try to stay invested in a single account is always preferable. While I know editing a question to be something else completely is at odds with the rules, if there aren't any answers, there's no harm done especially when all the guidance out there says "edit, edit, edit and improve!"
Y'all can use your votes as you feel you should, I'm just saying, this isn't as harmful as one might think, and can actually be beneficial.