I wrote a blog post about this last year and pulled a bunch of stats with Stack Overflow's data explorer. I think it should be interesting. Running the same queries again, the picture is only getting worse.
My conclusion was yes. In almost all of the important metrics for site quality, Stack Overflow is getting worse. Quantity might be increasing but I just don't believe they've proven that the model scales. They grew too quickly and the site hasn't adapted to the emerging issues.
I think this is perhaps the most damning stat I found
Careful with the scale here because it’s logarithmic. 54% of the class
of 2008 have answered more than 10 questions, and 15% have answered
more than 100. Compare that to 2019’s cohort and things are looking
pretty dismal: 0.4% have answered more than 10 and only 0.02% have
answered more than 100. A feat that would require the equivalent of
posting an answer every 3 days was achieved by only 500 of the 1.7
million new users in 2019.
Basically, what this shows is that new users are not answering questions. With millions of users registering every year, the divide between separate groups of answerers and askers grows. When answerers get disillusioned with this dynamic, their participation slows down, creating a negative feedback loop where the remaining answerers feel the strain even more. (See edit at the end if you don't like this measurement)
For those following along at home, it got even worse in 2020. 0.3% of the 2.2m new users answered more than 10 questions. 0.017% answered more than 100.
I know Stack Overflow is a big organization but even in that context development progress is very slow, at least on the main site. A lot of effort is dedicated to the enterprise product. Meanwhile, the flagship has remained more or less the same for years. We get piecemeal changes like a tweak to the amount of rep for upvotes of questions, or changes to the syntax highlighting (this one also benefits the enterprise offering - I wonder if we'd have been lucky enough to receive it otherwise).
The Welcoming was a well-intentioned disaster that made me suspect Stack Overflow can't really identify the core issues. Again, I don't believe the model scales, and they tried to frame that as a community issue rather than an issue with their platform. New users don't know (or are not interested in learning) how to participate. Of course, everyone is responsible for what they say (though, crucially, not necessarily how they are perceived) but when you design a system that invites frustration, don't blame your users when they act out of frustration. Fix the system.
I get it. The help center is long and boring, and Stack Overflow is quite different from other websites. I can totally see why people wouldn't read it or would assume Stack Overflow just functions like a normal forum etc. I can't name 1 other website where you have to read so much content to know how to properly participate. I do try to remind myself of that when conducting myself here.
But in the end, for me at least, the effort required to gracefully accept an endless stream of poor quality content is just too exhausting. I've stopped participating really. The few questions I do ask, which I invest good time in and often add bounties to, get no traction at all. There really is just no value in participating here anymore.
Of course, there will always be value in the historic content to every developer but since Stack Overflow doesn't actually own that, I do wonder how long it will be before someone swipes the good content, skims off the crap, and presents it in a better package. Perhaps one where the on-site search isn't trash.
The problems they have are not trivial but they're a company with a $2B valuation and if they're worth that valuation then they should be able to solve them. I don't personally believe I know how to solve them but what I do know is that drastic changes are required.
For instance, we desperately need some automatic quality gate to stop the flood of awful questions. One idea I had was to require N upvoted answers before you are allowed to post your first question. If you have nothing to contribute back to other users, and will only take and take and take then I'm very sorry but we don't want you here. Yes, it would be a perfect world if every beginner could get an answer to every trivial issue they have; we tried that and it doesn't work.
Stack Overflow would probably see stifling new users from asking questions as a suicidal business move. In fact, the suicidal move is... pretty much everything they're already doing.
Edit:
There was some concern in the comments that this doesn't account for time spent on the site. Of course, users who have been a member of the site for longer have had longer to reach the lofty heights of 10 answers.
My presumption was that if rate-of-answering is constant (lets say 1 answer per month), then the average user would take 10 months to reach 10 answers. So for all induction years longer ago than 10 months, you would see the same percentage. The fact that you don't see that means either the rate-of-answering is ridiculously, laughably low, or the rate-of-answering is indeed declining.
So I pulled some stats on number of answers per day since account creation.
This method disproportionately harms users who have been around longer, because they are more likely to have taken hiatuses or left entirely, yet still shows they answer much more.
Year Answers/user/day 1 answer every N days
2008-09 0.01833 54
2009-10 0.00912 109
2010-11 0.00404 247
2012-13 0.00184 543
2013-14 0.00108 925
2014-15 0.00085 1176
2015-16 0.00076 1315
2016-17 0.00061 1639
2017-18 0.00046 2173
2018-19 0.00044 2272
2019-20 0.00041 2439