This is going to be incredibly incendiary and controversial for a feature that was launched today, but I feel that it has to be said.
The new Collectives feature relies on existing conventions to ensure that content remains moderated and curated as per Stack Overflow norms. Stack Overflow has always had an uneasy relationship with major projects and other tech communities pointing their users to us and working with the community in our space.
The Collectives feature does not address key pain points in working with those communities; chiefly, the biggest one being that those communities are not active on Stack Overflow to the degree that several members could handle content moderation consistent with our expected norms.
By introducing this as a commercialized feature, Stack Overflow is implicitly expecting the work of content moderation to be done by the community, with the only real kick back being that the lights stay on. Despite the company's FAQ providing some reassurances in regards to how moderation could work, due to the fact that money has exchanged hands, the community no longer appears to be the primary driver of what kind of content it wishes to support.
Therefore, I can not in good faith consent to any kind of moderation of any questions living within a collective, and I forcefully request that those collectives be made responsible for moderating and curating their own content.
The FAQ attempts to address my concern directly:
But does this mean that these organizations own the Q&A content?
No, all questions and answers will remain on Stack Overflow. Nothing changes here. Moderation rules, code of conduct, etc. will all remain the same. The license of the content will remain the same as described here.
Does Stack Overflow become a support portal for large organizations?
No. Even though we might see more of our customers' clients coming to Stack Overflow for help, the rules around Q&A on Stack Overflow remain the same, and we'll continue to set appropriate expectations with our customers & users.
...however I've been around long enough to know that this isn't as smooth as we want it to be.
The first point is the most blatant one I'm calling out - everything here remains the same. From a process perspective, that's good! It means that the natural Stack Overflow engine will continue to work as it always has.
But it also means that there is absolutely no expectation set on the Collective or any of its members to have enough reputation to moderate content, or be in tune with our site's norms. We - the curators - have to pick up that slack.
In the light of the recent acquisition, I find this to be disrespectful. I could almost accept it if it were necessary to keep or continue operations, but even then I would still want to charge communities who wanted their little slice of Stack Overflow to be responsible for taking care of it, as opposed to tacitly and implicitly pushing that responsibility onto the community.
In other words - I don't want to work for free. My time as a volunteer is valuable, and I'm starting to realize that it's a lot more valuable than I originally believed it to be.
The second point is that these "appropriate expectations" aren't really clear. I mean, it isn't like the company has that great of a track record on telling outsiders what our site is about, so I'm not feeling super confident that we're going to be able to tell customers what the site is about and expect them to fully be OK with that.
They're paying, after all.
And yes, I fully recognize that this is a presumption. However, the company doesn't really tell us anything anymore, and with the trend towards profit and monetization, I don't anticipate this whole agreement being entirely balanced in the perspective of the community-at-large and the outside communities reaching a mutual understanding.
Furthermore, this approach takes Stack Overflow closer to that of a social media platform as opposed to being strictly about Q&A. In the past, no one cared if you were officially working for a company, but only if your solution was valuable. Users who work or have worked for big tech companies have done very, very well in providing valuable solutions in the framework of vanilla Q&A.
We never intended to become a forum, or like social media, or like anything resembling forums or the other things that Stack Overflow was built to destroy. Collectives change that, and that is not a welcome change for me.
Ultimately from my perspective, this represents a major paradigm shift away from the community participating in the direction of the site to the company dictating the site.
And that's fine. But I'm going to just politely request that you clean up after yourselves, though.
Edit: After Google's initial misuse of Collectives, Stack Overflow is exploring ways to make that kind of content "work" with the site. In a move that felt like it was wholly predictable, instead of outright rejecting the kind of content that was going to show up, the company is trying to figure out a way to accommodate it. This is one very strong reason why I do not wish to moderate any collective, and I am further demanding that the company require anyone using collectives to moderate it on their own.