Let me start by saying: I am in full favor of rewarding volunteers using (one or two) "trust points", when they perform the vital service of closing questions that should be legitimately closed. It's time to reward the duplicate finders
However, that would only focus on half of the glaring problem of unnecessary site bloat -- question askers. Yes, there are questions that don't need to remain in the Stack Overflow vault, but there are volunteers, new & experienced, that are contributing to the bloat too -- question answerers.
The following is my recommendation to discourage the answering of close-worthy questions which will go a long way to help the roomba to maintain the Stack Overflow and allow volunteers to focus on better quality questions and more meaningful tasks.
For simplicity, I will supply just two levels of infraction penalty, but the pattern can be extended if/as needed:
- Fresh Question Throttling Level 1 - 3 Hour (L1) - you may not answer a question that is under 3 hours old; all question older than 3 hours are completely fair game. In other words, you can interact with ANY question that has been posted under 3 hours ago in ANY way EXCEPT posting an answer. You can vote, you can edit, you can flag, you can comment; you just cannot post an answer.
- Fresh Question Throttling Level 2 - 1 Day (L2) - all the same rules, just 21 hours longer.
How does a user qualify for such automated grooming?
- By default, a user who has not yet answered 4 questions will be placed into L1 throttling.
- A user whose last 3 out of 4 answers have been on questions that have been closed (for any reason) will be placed into L1 throttling.
- A user who was already in L1 throttling and 6 of their last 8 answers have been on questions which have been closed (for any reason) will be placed into L2 throttling.
What does this accomplish?
- This prevents new users from answering until the wider community has had ample time to make informed decisions on the viability of the question.
- This directly puts a stop to Fastest Gun in the West answers who make no effort to close questions that should be closed.
Why do I think that this is "Firm but Fair" / "Meaningful without being Mean"?
- Nearly 100% of all low-rep users will have absolutely no knowledge of the benefits/importance of closing versus answering. Other users who can distinguish good questions from close-able questions will get the time to make this determination.
- We've all seen it. A FGITW user rushes a code-only solution to a basic duplicate question in the first 90 seconds, then the Upvote Pixies heap on the rep points for assumed correctness, the answerer sees that lovely green at the top of the screen and repeats the behavior as feverishly as they can. It is my experience that Upvote Pixies do not use the "recently active" question filtering and answers that are posted hours later NEVER get the same amount of reward as the FGITW answers. FGITW users come in a variety of rep levels -- this is an unbiased grooming imposed on 1-reppers and 300K-reppers.
- This throttling does NOT stop anyone from posting answers. There are literally millions of questions to answer at any given moment. This initiative only prevents posting on the very freshest of questions.
- When a user with more than 4 answers is placed in L1 or L2 throttling, they will be able to review their most recent answers to see how the page was closed. This will allow them to reflect on their own behavior and adjust to become a better contributor (or even flag/vote to reopen if they can / wish to) (or they may even wish to delete their answer and transfer it to the earlier question if it is appropriate/unique there).
- This will prevent the heartbreak in cases where volunteers with good intentions craft a generous answer to a duplicate question that should have been closed, then the page is deleted and that answerer feels that they have wasted their time. Grooming them to differentiate between good and bad questions will prevent this. For those with access, I have an answer in the Stack Moderators site with the heading "Answering a good question well" which began my thinking on this proposal.
- I have erred on the side of being too loose with what qualifies a user for throttling. It should be rather hard to have 3 of your last 4 answers be on closed questions.
- If you go from L1 to L2 throttling, then geez, you really aren't getting the idea. Again, this gives the community more time to close the questions that you are answering and rewards you less for answering close-able questions ...until your question selection improves and your throttling is automatically lifted by answering less-fresh questions.
I have more to say about this proposal, but nobody likes my wall-of-text posts. I will try to reply to all answers and comments when my work/family requirements allow me.
I would like to receive answers to this question that:
- identify vulnerabilities (how users will try to game/circumvent this feature)
- positive/negative ramifications on the community/content
- suggested refinements which would make this proposal more likely to be successful/implemented