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As part of the Outdated Answers project, we are introducing a new, permanent answer view tracking pixel that records when specific answers are viewed. It will be rolled out later this week in stages, starting with 1% of our traffic and working our way up to 100%.

We currently don't track if and when specific answers are viewed, and this is hampering our ability to do data analysis for a new sorting algorithm that will weight more recent upvotes more heavily than older ones. The answer view pixel will collect metadata about the answer, such as position on page, score, etc. 

Our definition of when an answer is viewed is broad and we're purposefully triggering when the answer is first visible, not when it's been meaningfully read. It will be triggered when you've only partially read an answer or you scroll past it quickly. This came up in our planning and we decided not to exclude these additional views in our collection. We're taking this into account when we do our analysis, will filter out the noise, and won't let it skew our findings.

For the time being, we are only recording requests to the answer view pixel data in our traffic logs and are not recording the view counts in our primary production databases. This means that there are no immediate plans to display this data on the site, make it available in SEDE, or expose it via the API.

The answer pixel is classified in the same category as a performance cookie, so if you have opted out of performance cookies in your cookie settings, then per our cookie policy, we will not collect this data from you. The performance category doesn't include any targeting or advertising-related cookies, only things that help us understand how people are using our site.

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    I'm curious if my adblocker is blocking this, as this is something I'd actually want to support. Is it possible to get some information about the pixel?
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 21, 2021 at 15:43
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    Would this system be confused by browsers preloading images outside of the viewport? Or if the pixels are only added by Javascript when in view, why not just send the data directly, perhaps through the websocket? Sep 21, 2021 at 15:44
  • 47
    Tracking pixels sound like such an old technology. Why not use Intersection Observers? They’re supported in all your supported browsers. Sep 21, 2021 at 15:55
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    @FélixAdriyelGagnon-Grenier we count an answer as viewed when you've seen the post's score in the voting controls - it's a little broad, but we're aiming to over-collect here rather than under-collect
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 21, 2021 at 16:00
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    @Cerbrus If you're looking to block this with your adblocker, the tracking pixel route has the form /answers/{postId}/ivc/{hash}
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 21, 2021 at 16:01
  • 32
    @KylePollard: I'm looking to make sure I'm not blocking it, but thanks :D
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 21, 2021 at 16:02
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    @JohnDvorak We're using IntersectionObserver in our implementation, so there's no worries here on triggering views outside of the viewport
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 21, 2021 at 16:02
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    @SebastianSimon that's exactly our implementation, and the discussion around browser support is what lead to our browser support page now having a nice caniuse.com search box at the top
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 21, 2021 at 16:03
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    @Scratte We will be over-collecting when users scroll. This will happen when someone scrolls down to answer since the answer text box is after all of the answers. This came up in our planning and we decided not to exclude these in our collection. We're taking this into account when we do our analysis and won't let it skew our findings.
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 21, 2021 at 16:17
  • 10
    @KylePollard maybe debounce the collection to only fire if the scroll position stays fixed for several seconds? It's not like the reading speed is infinitely fast :) Sep 21, 2021 at 16:18
  • 31
    What we really need is eye implants on everyone.
    – matt
    Sep 21, 2021 at 16:51
  • 27
    @matt [status-planned] 👀
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 21, 2021 at 17:07
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    @Someone_who_likes_SE the last paragraph of the post has instructions on how to opt out. You'll want to go to your cookie settings and opt out of performance cookies.
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 21, 2021 at 20:38
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    Given the whole Intersection Observer thing, is there actually a tracking pixel here, or did you just use that term in the title because people are more familiar with those? Sep 21, 2021 at 22:15
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    @user2357112supportsMonica It's more for familiarity - if we were going by the strictest of definitions, then it's probably considered a web beacon which is a superset of tracking pixels, but I don't think that web beacon is a commonly understood term. (At least, not more understood than tracking pixels are)
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 22, 2021 at 4:01

8 Answers 8

25

Our over-collection of answer views is here, and there's some great points on the risks involved with it.

I hear the point that our metric isn't accurately tracking when someone has read the answer. We won't be making the assumption that "answer pixel triggered" means "the answer was meaningfully read and understood" but rather "answer pixel triggered" means "the top part of the answer was visible on the page at any point". This is modelled after our question views which trigger when the page is loaded - not when you've meaningfully understood the answer.

The case where the top of the next answer is visible and triggered early is definitely an overcollection, but it's a tradeoff. It's difficult to assign the tracking to the dynamic content in the post, so our best options were the voting controls or the signature after the answer. We preferred the overcollection of the voting controls over the under-collection of the signature.

We're also being mindful of the number of requests we generate. We have to be careful about passively generating extra requests on the question page when you scroll since it's the busiest page on our site. We could trigger an additional time when you finish reading the answer, but we want to avoid any unnecessary requests.

That being said, I understand the fear of bad data leading to bad decisions and that we should be cautious when using this data. Maybe "the top part of the answer was visible at any point" is too noisy? I had a conversation with the data team that will be handling the analysis and discuss the concerns outlined in this post, and they offered two ways they'll be reducing the noise here at analysis time rather than collection time:

  • We can tell when you've viewed the bottom of an answer when you've triggered an answer view for the next answer. (This will be an under-collection of viewing the entire answer since you won't always view the next answer, but will provide a good lower bound of answer views. We're aware that this won't happen for the last answer on the page since there's no subsequent answer there.)
  • We can tell when you've rapidly scrolled past answers since the timestamp of each view will be unreasonably close together

In the future there's still room to iterate on this - if we see too much noise or we're unhappy with how this is collecting data, we can still modify the trigger criteria. If we ever want to expose answer views in the future, we may consider making this a more meaningful metric. However, for the purpose of our analysis in the scope of the outdated answers project, this kind of over-collection combined with filtering out the noise is exactly what we're looking for.

To summarize:

  • Our definition of a view for the purposes of this collection is when the answer was visible, not when the answer was meaningfully read
  • We're going to filter out noisy views
  • We have an upper bound for a meaningful answer view by looking at when the top of the answer was visible
  • We have a lower bound for a meaningful answer view by looking at when the top of the next answer was visible

We'll be sure to share when and how we're using this answer view data to drive future decisions like we did with the copy and voting data during the unpinning experiment. I hope that you can continue to keep us honest in our data collection and analysis as we continue work on outdated answers - I sincerely appreciate the feedback and questions.

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    I added a paraphrase of your comment to this effect to the question itself, for more visibility. Please do correct/elaborate on it as necessary.
    – TylerH
    Sep 23, 2021 at 19:23
  • "I hear the point that our metric isn't accurately tracking when someone has read the question." Did you mean the answer there at the end? Sep 24, 2021 at 8:05
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    "...so our best options were the voting controls or the signature after the question..." Why is that best? I probably would have opted for something in the middle or perhaps somewhere in the first half, if I had to pick a single spot (rather than doing something more rigorous). Sep 24, 2021 at 8:11
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    Thank you for writing this up, much appreciated! I can't say I'm persuaded. I really don't buy that filtering will make it possible to meaningfully use the data (except for the timestamps part, that makes sense). But I'm just one person. Sep 24, 2021 at 8:11
  • Relevant: The Law of Truly Large Numbers. Sep 24, 2021 at 14:13
  • "It's difficult to assign the tracking to the dynamic content in the post, so our best options were the voting controls or the signature after the answer. We preferred the overcollection of the voting controls over the under-collection of the signature." - you could do both. Would that have impacted performance too much? Sep 29, 2021 at 16:23
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    @T.J.Crowder re: options, I don't think we have any other static controls on a question between the voting controls and the signature that show for all users, the only other component between them is the user content of the post. (Though, I'm grouping in the history button with the rest of the voting controls)
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 29, 2021 at 18:58
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    @user2357112supportsMonica Adding two passively triggered network requests for each answer was considered too expensive at our scale, so we chose not to do both.
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 29, 2021 at 19:00
  • @KylePollard - Thanks for reaching out. :-) I don't think a tracking pixel is the right tool for this job, regardless of placement. But if you want placement suggestions, I'd say go for left of the post body about 1/3 to 1/2 of a page height from the top of the page body (but not below the midpoint of the answer). (If it can't be that dynamic, perhaps pick an avg page height and post height and use that, again limited to 1/2 the height of the post body via CSS.) But while I think that would be better, I don't think it would be good. Sorry, not trying to be difficult. :-) Sep 30, 2021 at 6:49
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Too much noise to signal

  • This will over-report "viewing" of answers that are at the top of the sort order (whatever sort order you use).

  • I don't really "view" an answer in any meaningful way when I'm scrolling past it looking for something else. Examples:

    • If I'm looking for an accepted or upvoted answer when not using the by-votes sort order (which I often don't), I'll just be scrolling past a number of rubbish answers.

    • If I'm looking for a newer answer when using the by-votes sort order, I'll be scrolling past old answers.

  • The top of an answer (with its voting buttons and score, where Kyle said the tracking pixel will be) scrolls into view when I'm looking at another answer entirely. Example (this is not a posed picture, it happened organically as I was proofreading my answer and I thought "hey, wait a minute"):

    enter image description here

    I'm not "viewing" the answer at the bottom.

But a tracking pixel will claim I "viewed" those things.

I'd be very worried about any decisions made on the basis of this tracking pixel, given how wildly inaccurate it will be. Anticipating the "Oh, we'll be careful using this information" reply: Then why collect it at all? Humans like to see patterns in things. You'll see patterns in the data that you think you need to act on, which aren't really patterns that require action.

If you really want this information, I suggest investing in a more accurate means of collecting it, to avoid collecting duff data leading to duff decisions.

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    I've suggested debouncing the function for a several seconds to ensure the user is at least looking at the answer and not just scrolling past in the comments, but the reply is "maybe later"... Sep 23, 2021 at 6:45
  • This is one of the parts that I tried to touch in my answer, since it seems like trying to validate an action that is set on stone, rather than observe and ask questions.
    – Braiam
    Sep 23, 2021 at 14:14
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    I've posted a detailed response in my answer here
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 23, 2021 at 18:58
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    Your two sub bullet points make one wonder why you don't just sort by those available options when you are looking for things that way. Would probably save you a lot of time.
    – TylerH
    Sep 23, 2021 at 19:15
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    @TylerH - Frankly, "you're doing it wrong" isn't helpful here. The point isn't whether people should do it (I prefer handling exceptions to my normal mode this way, rather than changing the mode), but that they do do it, and it affects the tracking pixel. That's what's relevant here. Sep 24, 2021 at 6:33
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    @T.J.Crowder Good thing I didn't offer that response, then! I could have, but I presumed you had reasons, and was hoping to see them enumerated so that I and perhaps the devs could benefit from the perspective. Maybe I should have just offered that response, considering you were dismissive anyway.
    – TylerH
    Sep 24, 2021 at 13:26
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    That aside, different sort or scroll behavior is actually not that relevant to beginning to collect this data, since they know there are a whole host of things that will make the data not 100% accurate/meaningful. They were super clear about overcollecting in the comments (which, understandably, not everyone reads), but that info is edited into the post above now for everyone's benefit. Starting with a wide net, and then reeling it in, is a very effective strategy for gathering analytic data where you have none.
    – TylerH
    Sep 24, 2021 at 13:26
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    If SO wants to know what I am reading, then shouldn't they blur/obscure all content that I am not "focused" on? I mean, if I want to unblur a particular portion of content, then I can just mouseover it on nonmobile (or tap it on mobile). This would give SO real clarity while compromising the UX! ...just saying. For the record, I study incorrect/suboptimal/bad answers longer than I study correct answers that I actually use for work -- because I am an enthusiastic content curator. Maybe these pixels can be used to id voting abuse too -- when users read my answer for 1s before downvoting. Sep 26, 2021 at 22:44
  • Is it possible to bracket answers with a pair of tracking pixels so you can track which ones are actually visible and for how long? That information could be used to infer which answers were actually being read, based on the event timestamps.
    – Z4-tier
    Sep 27, 2021 at 1:58
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    @mickmackusa - That's a good point about spending longer trying to figure out bad answers... Sep 27, 2021 at 7:11
  • Is this feature the change that has recently rendered Stack Overflow unusable on all my browsers? The cursor disappears so I can't see what I'm selecting or where I'm about to click to type. Normal text has become unselectable and uncopyable. It's a train wreck.
    – matt
    Sep 29, 2021 at 1:09
  • @matt - I doubt it, that sounds more like the recent changes discussed here and here. But FWIW, I haven't had issues like that or heard people discussing them re those changes. I use SO a lot, mostly on Chrome but sometimes on Firefox, and haven't had issues. If you have any Stack Apps installed, you might want to make sure they're fully up-to-date. I hope you figure it out! Sep 29, 2021 at 6:45
  • @T.J.Crowder They seem to have fixed it during the downtime last night. Now we'll never know! :)
    – matt
    Sep 29, 2021 at 12:21
22

Seeing that you announced this here at MSO, rather than MSE, am I right in assuming this is going to be implemented only on Stack Overflow, and not on the broader network?

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    Correct - if that changes we'll make a broader announcement.
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 23, 2021 at 15:45
14

What do you learn from the data gathered? If an answer is very seldomly viewed, is this then a sign, that this answer needs to be sorted up, because obviously people are not finding it? Or is it a sign that the question is supposed to stay where it is, because people have found the answer they are looking for before? Simply the fact whether an answer has been displayed on some screen does not seem to indicate anything useful for that particular answer.

Let's say someone answers a question and the answer is generally valid and fine, so that it receives a number of upvotes. If a while later another answer is added, which is more detailed, better formatted, cites better sources, uses a clearer and more concise language and is more up to date, then there is the danger that this answer is never viewed, because it starts with zero upvotes and people won't see it. This is something I think you want to solve with "giving more weight to recent votes" to give those answers a chance. Good idea. But what do the views have to do what that. You say you want "to do data analysis for a new sorting algorithm that will weight more recent upvotes more heavily than older ones" But how is the views actually helping here?

I think you need to put the views into relation with something else.

So one thing I can think of that might actually help is the ratio between votes and views. A high votes/views ratio might indicate that the answer is worth sorting up.

On the other hand I have some doubts that this works out. Let's assume the top most answer is very specific and has high quality. Another answer has also high quality, but is slightly off-topic. Now for a very small portion of people the "off-topic"-answer is more valid. That is the type of people that will continue to scroll down and up-vote that answer. This will give that answer a high votes/view ratio. Does that indicate that this answer is supposed to be sorted up? I don't think so.

There is also the question on how the feature maybe mislead. Will the statistic be anonymous? Or is the user recorded? In case of the later: Are the views removed if a user is removed just like it happens with votes? What is with anonymous users in this case? Will views from users that are not logged in simply not count? If anonymous stats will count, this might mean that it is easy to intentionally mislead the system by generating certain patterns of "views".

What might be a better way of gathering data? Maybe a voting system? Oh it is already there...

I fear that if this data is there then it will be forcefully interpreted "somehow", no matter whether it makes any sense.

Maybe the whole idea is better thought out than what you present here. If so I suggest that you add more information on how you intend to interpret such answers. If not I suggest to first make a better plan.

6

Are there any plans to use this in the “reached” metric?

As far as I know, the amount of people reached is calculated based on the metrics mentioned here, and that bases it off of the view a question has (as long as the answer meets a couple other criteria), but now that views per answer are counted, are there any plans to use this to calculate people reached?

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    Currently there are assumptions made about answer views when calculating the "reached" metric. We are hoping that getting real data about answer views will allow us to apply more accurate calculations to the "reached" metric. However, no time frame on this. Sep 22, 2021 at 16:48
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    @YaakovEllis - A tracking pixel near the voting buttons will not provide "real data." Sep 23, 2021 at 6:34
  • If I post a long answer and the snippet is at the end (after a lengthy explanation), then the user's viewport will be below where the voting buttons are. This will potentially draw the next answer's buttons into the viewport. Seems really unreliable to me. I find myself really agreeing with TJ. Sep 26, 2021 at 22:47
  • @T.J.Crowder given that we didn't even have timestamped view information for the question page itself (for comparison with an answer creation date) this is at least a step forward. Plus, I suspect this particular method could be expanded to capture a little more information about how much of the answer was onscreen and for how long (without getting too chatty). I do wish more of that development would be done up front so it doesn't get stuck in this state. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    – canon
    Oct 1, 2021 at 13:32
  • @canon - I don't see collecting fundamentally-flawed information as a step forward, but I think I've made my views on it fairly clear. :-) Oct 1, 2021 at 13:33
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    Yes, well... having flawed/incomplete data didn't stop them from building an entire metric on it. So, here we are. :P
    – canon
    Oct 1, 2021 at 13:35
  • @canon - What metric? Question views? Going to the question page is quite different to scrolling vaguely near an answer. I think I must be missing what you're referring to. Oct 1, 2021 at 13:36
  • People reached, baby. lol
    – canon
    Oct 1, 2021 at 13:37
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    @canon - Oh, that. No one with any sense takes that metric seriously. Oct 1, 2021 at 13:37
  • Precisely. But the only people who would even know better were involved in the meta discussion.
    – canon
    Oct 1, 2021 at 13:38
4

My only doubt about tracking answer views is that a user must view an answer to determine the quality of that answer, whether it is good or bad. This means that the number of views an answer get wouldn't be directly determined by the relative quality of that answer, but by the absolute quality of other answers. Again, there's no way for the user to compare the quality of two answers without viewing both of them.

Suppose that the average user scrolls down through the answers until they find one that is "good enough". Then, if any answer exists that is "good enough", it should naturally result in a decrease in views in any answers that appear lower on the page, regardless of relative quality (since the user doesn't feel the need to keep scrolling after their problem is solved).

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    I always doubt the meaning of "doubt", especially on Stack Exchange. Which one? Sep 23, 2021 at 15:53
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    @Peter Mortensen I meant uncertainty about the efficacy of the proposed method. Feel free to edit the answer if there is any issue. Sep 23, 2021 at 16:40
-2

You stated what you are going to do, adding answer tracking pixel, but you didn't fully explain why.

What is your end goal? What kind of metrics you expect to get, why you think it is important, and what will you do with the results?

The reason I am asking is that you seem to try to get some tangible metrics from answers that will help you assess how valid some answer is. But there is none. You cannot automate it. Only valid metrics are upvotes and downvotes and they can have flaws, too.

When I visit some page looking for answers, I usually read all of them, especially if all are on the same page. When I am moderating questions, again I read all answers (maybe not to the last letter).

The only exception are questions where answers span multiple pages. I usually switch to Active view on such questions, to make sure I see most recent answers, just in case. But again, just seeing the newest answer does not mean it is a good answer or a bad one.

And even now, I don't always vote on everything, good or bad.

If you want to combine views with voting patterns, you will not get better results either. I used Stack Overflow for years before I opened an account, and I had similar use pattern, the difference is that I couldn't vote. So if I found answer on the bottom and it was a better one you would not get any feedback from me back then.

Adding copying metrics is also flawed. Copying itself does not mean answer works, not copying also does not mean it does not work. Maybe you didn't need to copy because it was short code. Maybe it was just about a concept. Maybe you didn't need to copy because you already had your own solution, but only few lines of code were missing.

Can you please focus on more constructive ways of dealing with content, like how to add versioning, how to add warnings to dangerous content, how to review those. Who should be able to flag and judge the flags. Those are the things that can improve content quality.

I know that you want to measure before you act, but not everything can be measured. If it could, you would not need human moderators.

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    "As part of the Outdated Answers project. <...>" The "why" is covered...
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:30
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    "Copying itself does not mean answer works" I'd often copy part of an post to put in a comment. And when I copy code on main, it's mostly to say there is some sort of problem with the code there.
    – VLAZ
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:31
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    @Cerbrus Yes, I understand that this is the part of "Outdated answers project" and even sorting algorithm is mentioned, but that is too vague.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:33
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    You don't think it can be useful to determine how often a answer is viewed, in regards to cleaning up outdated answers? They're not trying to measure answer validity, they're measuring answer's usefulness.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:36
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    More precisely, they are trying to measure how many answers are viewed when comparing different sorts: If a person comes back again and again and views more and more answers, that means that the first shown answers aren't good. This will allow them to add another metric when creating a new sort.
    – MegaIng
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:43
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    @MegaIng "This will allow them to add another metric when creating a new sort" That is the thing. There are no better sorts. Only score counts, because people explicitly cast votes. The only other relevant sort would be sorting by versions. But there is no versioning support yet.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:49
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    @MegaIng Oh, yes I did... and it is going in "the waste time on nothing useful direction"
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:52
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    Neither views nor copying is ever going to affect the sorting. Only votes and age of those votes is planned to affect sorting (AFAIK). But to test if this works, SO needs metrics (other than votes). Copying is one way, Views on answers is another.
    – MegaIng
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:54
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    @DalijaPrasnikar: That's your opinion, and you're free to think so. Please remain constructive, though. For example, that last paragraph in this answer is just a jab at SE, it's unconstructive.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:54
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    "things that are bound to fail" Again, that is your opinion, based on publicly available information.
    – Cerbrus
    Sep 22, 2021 at 8:59
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    @DalijaPrasnikar Running A/B tests. You can see how people behave with one sorting and how they behave with the other sorting.
    – MegaIng
    Sep 22, 2021 at 9:17
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    @Cerbrus Yes, I am perfectly aware that what I wrote is my opinion. Since it is mentioned that tracking is related to "Outdated answers project" I added some specific points arguing why view metric is mostly irrelevant to that. I would like to hear contra arguments to those specific points or possible some I haven't thought of.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Sep 22, 2021 at 11:40
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    @Cerbrus Since when it is required that meta answer must only contain facts? I am asking them to prove me wrong. To give me some convincing arguments that will make me reconsider my POV. I know they don't have numbers, but they do have some idea why they think views are important.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Sep 22, 2021 at 12:10
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    I am OK with the content and format of this answer. It's criticizing the idea of relying on raw metrics for exploratory purposes. Which is kind of like saying, "stop trying to make a better curator robot and empower your human volunteers instead". I'm inclined to agree. I also got the feeling that SE might be just going on a fishing expedition for data that "sounds vaguely useful at first glace", ignoring the fact that it's got a community of expert coder curators that can classify a post as useful better than any algorithm ever could.
    – jrh
    Sep 22, 2021 at 12:27
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    @Cerbrus I appreciate your comments. I tried to explain why I don't agree with them and your proposal to change the answer. I have though about it and decided I will stick to the original answer. I don't mind you downvoting because you disagree. That is what Meta voting is all about.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Sep 22, 2021 at 12:49
-13

I'm worried about something else... it seems that you already have the algorithm and will only track this as a way to tweak it. I hope is not the case for a simple reason:

We already tweaked the system to show the top-voted answer first. Let’s see how it goes before we try to modify the ordering further. Maybe the problem is already fixed. AFAIK, there hasn't been any complain about the top-voted answer, just a general fear that it is not up-to-date (which has better and scalable solutions).

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    People have consistently complained about top voted answers being outdated and wrong, nearly as much as they've complained about accepted answers. While this may be more likely to be the case on very high scoring posts, so a small subset of questions - they may also be some of the most highly-referenced questions at the same time.
    – Catija
    Sep 22, 2021 at 17:08
  • @Catija [citation needed] I've only seen arguments that the pinned answer to the top is outdated or wrong. And even the examples in meta literature show this. The one that asks for the introduction of an obsolete vote is accepted, this one about unpinning if the answer is negative scored is also accepted, and well, going through the list here repeats the same story: pinning the accepted answer was the problem.
    – Braiam
    Sep 22, 2021 at 17:19
  • Note that in the case of the obsolete answer, it was also fixed by editing.
    – Braiam
    Sep 22, 2021 at 17:21
  • @Catija still waiting for the source of your claims. I provided mine :)
    – Braiam
    Sep 23, 2021 at 9:46
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    Here's an answer by mickmackusa on the post announcing the unpinning of the accepted answer, it brings up the problem new answers face when there are lots of upvoted old answers. With it having +101/-10 votes currently I would say people do consider this a problem. Sep 23, 2021 at 11:10
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    We don't already have a sorting algorithm in mind. The need for data surrounding answer views have come up a few different times throughout the outdated answers project, this is just the one that pushed us into developing it.
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 23, 2021 at 15:47
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    I'm not as well versed in what meta posts exist out there, but this article posted to Reddit last week provides recent examples where the highest voted answers were not the best answers
    – Kyle Pollard StaffMod
    Sep 23, 2021 at 15:49
  • @AbdulAzizBarkat and yet, all the posts I linked outscore it. +600, +110, +295. It seems to me that mick issue is basically something more of a confirmation bias of a potential issue.
    – Braiam
    Sep 23, 2021 at 17:07
  • @KylePollard Actually (yes, I know), the source article shows how unpinning helped since the ones that outscore every other answer is because it was also accepted. So, yeah, problem solved, those answers will not appear first so the complain of the post "popular StackOverflow encryption code snippets" are not that popular anymore. There were a flurry of downvotes on some of those answers and upvotes on competing answers.
    – Braiam
    Sep 23, 2021 at 17:11
  • @Braiam how does those posts having higher score mean that people don't consider oudated and highly upvoted answers being at the top a problem? Also you really underestimate the effect of time there, those posts you link are 5 / 6 years old while the one I linked there is barely a month old. Does that mean one should wait 5-6 years before deciding that there is a problem and it needs to be fixed? Sep 23, 2021 at 17:27
  • @AbdulAzizBarkat you can see the timeline of votes on those posts ;). Most votes (and by that I mean 90%) came the first two weeks of the posts. None of the posts where featured, like the one you linked.
    – Braiam
    Sep 23, 2021 at 17:43

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