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UPDATE: We have concluded this pilot study, and will discontinue serving advertisements for technology courses on Stack Overflow starting May 31st, 2023. With your feedback on this post and the ads' performance metrics, we have gathered sufficient information that will guide us to develop new products you hopefully will find helpful. Thank you all for the time, patience, and feedback offered.


Beginning in late January, we’re partnering with two online course providers to present sponsored technology course recommendation advertisements on Stack Overflow. This is a pilot study for this type of ad, and we’ll be running tests over the course of a few months to develop an understanding of the value that course recommendations add to the platform.

On the day we launch, you will begin to see course recommendations from our first two partners - Pluralsight and Udemy. These recommendations will initially appear only for a subset of site traffic. Here’s what it will look like:

Four example course recommendation ads, each of which contains four courses. The ads also contain a header and a subtitle, which vary slightly.

When we show you these ads, we will display them in the existing sidebar ad slot, rather than create an additional ad slot dedicated to course recommendations. Our primary aim is to improve the usefulness and relevance of our ad slots to users. If you would like to see how this ad slot fits into the overall layout, please see this image.

The pilot will last approximately four months, and we'll be running experiments (e.g. altering the layout or design of the ad) during this time. We plan to partner only with Pluralsight and Udemy for the duration of the pilot study. Based on the results of the pilot study and your feedback, we'll decide on next steps. That includes a determination as to when we will open this ad slot up to additional partners that create technology courses relevant to Stack Overflow (provided they meet our advertiser guidelines).

Will these ads be targeted based on my browsing history?

We will base the ads on your Stack Overflow browsing history, only if you have opted in to tracking. Here are the ways you may have already opted in:

  • You opted in to “targeting cookies” in our cookie management dialog box.

  • You opted in for ad personalization via the “Activity data” section of your account settings page (note that this setting is ‘opt-in’ by default, but only controls your privacy settings if you’ve already opted in to targeting cookies):

    An image of section titled "activity data" on the Account Settings page

If you would like to opt out, you have two options:

  • You can opt out at any time by opening “Cookie Settings” in the footer of the page, and disabling “targeting cookies.”
  • You can also opt in or out at any time by flipping the toggle circled above on your account settings page.

Opting out either on your account settings page or in the cookie management dialog box will cause Stack Overflow to stop serving personalized recommendations (but will not stop recommendations from showing up entirely). If you are not logged in, then we will only use your cookie management settings.

And, as always, we do not and will not sell your personal information to 3rd parties.

What course recommendations will I see if I opt out of targeting?

If you opted out of personalized recommendations, we will still recommend courses to you - however, the courses will be based upon other non-personal data, such as the popularity of the course, or the question you’re currently looking at.

Where can I see what data Stack Exchange has about my account?

Stack Exchange offers our GDPR-compliant privacy and data management options to all users worldwide. If you would like to submit a request to export your data from Stack Exchange, you may do so using the GDPR request form.


If you have questions or feedback about the design we’ve selected, please feel free to provide that feedback here.

(Please note that the current iteration of this project is already built as of this announcement. Any feedback provided now will be weighed in future revisions of the course recommendations system, but please do not expect feedback to be incorporated before the initial release.)

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  • 53
    Why would we actively pursue leading users away from the platform?
    – Kevin B
    Jan 17, 2023 at 20:26
  • 81
    Well, when you partner with those sites, then could they offer a short course on how to effectively use Stack Overflow? How to ask, how to answer, how to do reviews etc. Might be more accessible than having a lot of help pages to read through. You then could also suggest those course when one is question banned for example.
    – Tom
    Jan 17, 2023 at 20:28
  • 27
    @Tom But that would require the intent of educating users constructively to contribute to knowledge rather than cash flow, and not just mindlessly shipping them off to more for-profit companies. Can't have that now, can we?
    – Zoe is on strike Mod
    Jan 17, 2023 at 20:30
  • 96
    @KevinB (Very) broadly speaking, courses perform a different function than Stack Overflow does. They provide comprehensive introductions to domain-specific topics, rather than providing answers to users' specific questions. We see them as complementary services.
    – Slate StaffMod
    Jan 17, 2023 at 20:36
  • 31
    Who is quality assuring recommendations? The few Udemy courses I have done in my specialist areas were terrible but "recommended". Now SO will be ranted about for bad course recommendations and bad manners.
    – QHarr
    Jan 17, 2023 at 22:58
  • 5
    @Tom: It already exists (though it could be out of date). Our very own Kate Gregory has a Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange course on Pluralsight (about 25 lessons, about 5 minutes each). It was once up on YouTube (but it was removed; the whole YouTube channel was deleted). This would be a good time to make it available for free. Jan 18, 2023 at 2:23
  • 16
    Just curious... but what type of community discussion is this question seeking? Is this asking about the visual design of the ad, and that's it; accompanied by a blog post? Are we supposed to comment on the "course recommendations system"? Perhaps some insights into how we as users are targeted would be useful.
    – Travis J
    Jan 18, 2023 at 4:22
  • 46
    Ad-blocker ready and working.
    – Alejandro
    Jan 18, 2023 at 13:53
  • 33
    What a coincidence that those other companies selling courses appear to be owned by Prosus as well. prosus.com/companies
    – Lundin
    Jan 18, 2023 at 15:21
  • 61
    I really enjoy these posts of SE announcing a new kind of ad because of the freak-outs of people who, for some reason, in 2023, after we've been bombarded with in-page web ads for >20 years, have yet to have trained their minds to just ignore them. SE gets some revenue and continues to exist. Your brain adapts if you give it a chance. Do so, then find something real to worry about. Like high-rep rep-farmers answering stupid (and duplicate) homework questions showing no research whatsoever.
    – davidbak
    Jan 19, 2023 at 2:37
  • 6
    Are you sure you want to partner with Udemy, which is well-known for (allowing) large-scale plagiary on their platform? Jan 19, 2023 at 11:32
  • 9
    @KevinB There's not really competition between Stack Overflow and pluralsight/udemy/edX etc. We actively close questions asking for such tutorials here. "Sending users away from the site" is a stretch. Technically any link to another website that is posted on SO is doing the same thing, but we don't disallow those.
    – TylerH
    Jan 19, 2023 at 14:55
  • 44
    Tough crowd. They're just ads, for goodness sake. At least they're making an effort to give us ads that are vaguely appropriate. We've had some very inappropriate ads on the network: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/…
    – PM 2Ring
    Jan 20, 2023 at 19:30
  • 7
    @Lundin Sure: people who are actually in the market for that product / service. But the point of my previous comment is that since some advertising is inevitable on the site we should be happy that SE is making the ads (relatively) on-topic. We don't have to like the ads, but hopefully we can at least tolerate them.
    – PM 2Ring
    Jan 24, 2023 at 14:09
  • 10
    Can you open a patreon instead? I'd pay you not to sell me stuff... I don't want extra permissions, favoritism, or even a badge in return. PLEASE let me pay you so you don't show ads to me or others. Jan 24, 2023 at 16:36

12 Answers 12

72

Four months...that's a long time.

I just triple checked my settings to see if I'd ever see them, and it looks like I wouldn't, but there's still some feedback that needs to be provided about this...if you'll receive it, I suppose.

  1. People don't come to Stack Overflow for this. A lot of the feedback and user engagement about how they want to use Stack Overflow as a place to learn isn't to be conflated with taking an online class to learn. They want us to teach them and/or be accessible to help them learn. I personally don't think that either goal is tenable, in any short or long term, but I also especially don't think that someone asking a question about their Java application suddenly needs a course about Docker.
  2. This muddies the actual purpose of the site. What is Stack Overflow to upper management, anymore? We haven't received anything clear. So, it feels like this is just something being thrown against the wall with the hope that it'll stick. For some people, they probably won't care; this is out of sight, out of mind, so it's no biggie. For the vast majority of people I know that use Stack Overflow, they do so unauthenticated, so they're unshielded from this advertisement. That'll take their attention away from why they're here in the first place, and I have a slight (and trust me it is very slight) concern that this'll drive them off.
  3. Seriously, what is it that you want to accomplish? Why are we doing this? Do we really want to use Stack Overflow as a platform where people can learn how to code? Or, and perhaps simpler, do these partner companies just want a bigger loudspeaker to amplify their offerings?

I'm already at a point where I don't believe that Stack Overflow is acting with a lot of the interest in the community or mission, so this will be what it is. The only thing that I'm just suggesting is that y'all have to figure out what your identity is, and quick. This isn't the type of ad that I'd care about or find relevant, so your marketing it to me is an abrupt turn away from this.

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  • 42
    Ah, yes. The Trust Thermocline. One of the most profound and satisfying things I've ever read on Twitter. (granted, that's a low bar.) Jan 17, 2023 at 21:09
  • 28
    At this point... the tour probably needs an update: Ask questions, get answers, no distractions
    – Kevin B
    Jan 17, 2023 at 21:37
  • 21
    This project is the conclusion of a fair amount of user research, so I'd caution against saying that the desire/utility aren't there. We've done our research in part because this is a revenue-generating feature, and we hope it will become an important one. But, we will take the time needed to fully evaluate both the efficacy of the ads themselves, and whether they're having any kind of undesirable effects on the community. Any significant negative impact to the community would prompt us to re-evaluate our strategy for this feature, just as we would with any feature.
    – Slate StaffMod
    Jan 17, 2023 at 22:20
  • 18
    I've never met someone who wanted to see more advertisements... rather, i've only seen people who wanted the advertisements they were required to see to be more relevant. I think it's fair to assume the latter was the target of the research?
    – Kevin B
    Jan 17, 2023 at 22:25
  • 6
    @Slate: In my experience on the site, user research has always yielded dubious results at best with some strongly held conventions about where the site has gone when it comes to Meta. But I'd rather acquiesce than beat that horse again; your numbers have more concreteness than my instincts, after all.
    – Makoto
    Jan 17, 2023 at 23:39
  • 90
    Why are you complaining? This is a way to generate revenue that is needed to keep this site running. If this is not the kind of ad you wish others to see, what would you recommend? At least it's related to the topic of Stack Overflow: programming courses. It's not like SO is changing direction. It's just an ad.
    – Dharman Mod
    Jan 18, 2023 at 1:11
  • 20
    @Dharman: I'm giving my feedback. While I could see why one would want to interpret it as a "complaint"...which honestly just makes me want to give feedback even less ...it's really not intended to be a complaint. For a period of time, ads that were run were super relevant to programming - things like IDEs or profiling tools or other things related directly to the industry were selected as ads. It's how I found IntelliJ and YourKit, after all. With this, I'm of the impression that the site wants to cater to the audience that comes here, looking for educators and leaves frustrated.
    – Makoto
    Jan 18, 2023 at 1:58
  • 16
    @Dharman: So while yes, I could see someone say that a programming course is related to programming...I would respectfully disagree. We've always been a Q&A site. We've only orthogonally been related to education. This muddies those waters, and this is the feedback I wanted to provide.
    – Makoto
    Jan 18, 2023 at 1:59
  • 11
    @Dharman: If you think I'm complaining, then there's really not much I can do about that. I don't feel the need to soften the blow or try to alter my language about this. My perspective is only one perspective, and I'm far from the loudest or most influential voice in the room, so I'm just speaking my mind on it. It'd be better to know and understand what direction the company thinks these ads will move the site in besides the one that I'm concerned about, which is...a place to get tutorials and learning on the cheap.
    – Makoto
    Jan 18, 2023 at 2:01
  • 5
    Re "Do we really want to use Stack Overflow as a platform where people can learn how to code?": I think "we" do. - "We want our users to not think of themselves ... as consumers, but to think of themselves as learners. ... New types of content: Articles, courses, blogs, and challenges". Though I expected something more ambitious than ads for external entities. Jan 18, 2023 at 2:36
  • 15
    Hmm. I learned how to program from Q&A on Stack Overflow. You've now encouraged me to go learn how to land a plane. Unfortunately, I don't learn very well from YouTube videos and mostly hate watching videos altogether. Do you have any other suggestions for where I can learn to land a plane in an emergency? Jan 18, 2023 at 5:09
  • 5
    It kinda depends on how you use SO to learn, I primarily answered questions here rather than using it for a tool to find answers. the simple act of solving lots of real-world problems from developers around the world was a great source for expanding my problem solving abilities. Asking questions on the other hand... doesn't seem like it'd be a great way to learn a whole lot, as ideally you'd quickly get to the point where you can solve them yourself and have little reason to ask. I'm not so sure there's such a wealth of great questions to answer these days.
    – Kevin B
    Jan 18, 2023 at 5:40
  • 5
    The flaw of these arguments is that the purpose of this might not necessarily be something that benefits SO at all. You are reasoning as if every change to SO must logically be a benefit for SO. But Prosus could deliberately try to generate business for Udemy and SO be damned - whatever gives most profits.
    – Lundin
    Jan 18, 2023 at 15:33
  • 23
    I disagree with the premise of this argument. People come to Stack Overflow because they don't know something about programming and they want to. Sometimes they come just to learn, and sometimes they come to solve a specific problem. More and more often, the people joining or visiting are less and less knowledgeable about programming. Showing them links to tutorials gives them a pathway to increase their knowledge, which is a net good thing on its own, but has a secondary benefit of, if the user returns to SO, they are now more knowledgeable, and more likely to provide useful content.
    – TylerH
    Jan 19, 2023 at 15:17
  • 5
    I'm kinda lost on this feedback tbh? How is an ad for a course on docker/AWS/ML/etc less of a good fit for SO than one for an IDE or a profiling tool, that you slot into the "acceptable/decent ads" category? If anything, i'm not coming to SO to get told what IDE to use, but if I'm looking at "how to do <basic task> in docker", it seems like I'm the exact target audience for a "doing things in docker" course?
    – mbrig
    Feb 1, 2023 at 23:50
43

Suggestion: include a button / link to display the explanation about how the course offering was curated and why it's being shown.

1
  • 20
    Hey - I actually think something like this is a really good idea, and I'm going to make sure the team has seen it. Can't guarantee it'll get prioritized (or how much info it can reasonably contain), but I circulated it a bit and folks do think it has utility :)
    – Slate StaffMod
    Jan 24, 2023 at 15:24
28

Did the previous partnering, or collaborating, with Pluralsight (from Story Assessments) contribute any lessons to be learned here? It seemed kind of like a dead end.

A lot of experts in their field are here on Stack Overflow, and even more visit without necessarily participating in posting. The developer population in general uses Stack Overflow at a much higher rate than other sites, and quite a lot of them could teach the courses linked here. Most of them took courses with much more rigor than simple online tutorials dressed up as learning experiences.

I understand the desire to monetize something out of this space, but this doesn't seem like a very efficient way to do it.

The power that Stack Overflow has is its access to some of the world’s most prolific tech content producers. If anything, that should be taken advantage of by giving that group more access to areas where content can actually be created. While systems like Documentation fell on their faces, it was not for a lack of content creation; it was a lack of integration that failed.

If Stack Overflow truly pairs well with basic online tutorials, we should just create a space that users can create themselves. A separate space from Stack Overflow, just as Udemy and Pluralsight are.

"The Documentation system, as introduced in this Meta post, is a way for Stack Overflow users to leverage the community to create documentation assets, such as tutorials and example code for general use cases of a specific language, technology, tool, or framework in situations where no official first-party documentation exists." -Docs tag wiki

This was really not a bad idea; it was just not given enough of its own space. Docs needed its own exchange, its own reputation sandbox, and the ability for the community to moderate content more strictly. It should at least be part of the conversation if more work is to be done on recommender systems or learning integration at Stack Overflow.

4
  • 13
    Docs had more problems besides separate rep and moderation - the wiki-style concept of docs doesn't mesh well with the SE model, leading to various issues with reputation and ownership. Longer, broader content such as tutorials is also inherently harder to validate and has more problems with plagiarism. Then there's "Docs light" aka "Collectives Articles", which has its own set of issues. So simply creating a docs.SE would not solve anything - we would need to have many long and hard conversations before even thinking of reviving Docs if we don't want to start the next dumpster fire.
    – l4mpi
    Jan 18, 2023 at 13:44
  • I am glad you agree that the integration of Docs was problematic, especially in that it needed its own space, reputation, and community moderation. Creating Docs.SE would address all of those issues, but certainly there were other aspects that need work. We would need the people actually creating content to be part of the conversation of how to move forward with rounding out the balance of turning a feature of that nature into something that fit in the learning space.
    – Travis J
    Jan 18, 2023 at 19:42
  • 2
    I'd rather that StackOverflow didn't try to go into docs. That seems like an entirely different product. Lets just have StackOverflow focus on doing what it does best, being a Q&A site. Nothing stopping some other company from coming up with a collaborative docs site. I mean, yes, the concept sounds really nice, I'd just be worried about having SO split their attention between two very different products. Feb 2, 2023 at 19:34
  • @ScottyJamison - I definitely agree, and I think that overall the community didn't necessarily blend well with the idea of providing "documentation" in place per se. That said, there is clearly a place and desire for something for free form. To some degree each of these newer features touch on that idea, but it is always a glancing blow. Specifically, we lack a place for users to create "code for general use cases". In some aspects that is done with dupe targets or canonicals, so to speak, but it does seem that there is a place for that somewhere here, if something were to be attempted.. imo
    – Travis J
    Feb 2, 2023 at 19:53
20

We're programmers. Those who don't want to see the courses will probably implement a Tampermonkey script to make the suggestions go away.

So, who will see the ads?

  • people who don't know how to Tampermonkey
  • people who don't want to Tampermonkey

You could make this easier for everyone by providing a switch to "See online courses" or not.

3
16

Let's say, theoretically, I have built a Udemy course. Is there a way that I can get my course recommended as part of this pilot? Or is this out of the control of a course content creator?

This type of thing is important and will impact the revenue share that Udemy has with its instructor community. Based on that linked page, I assume that this falls under "Udemy Advertisement" and the smaller share split.

1
  • 15
    Udemy provides us with a catalogue of courses related to technology. If you've created a course that is relevant to Stack Overflow, it may appear in the catalogue that is sent to Stack Overflow, and therefore, may appear in an ad here. For your second question, we'd strongly recommend connecting with Udemy to understand what your revenue share would be for courses you created for Udemy, to the extent they are part of this promotion on Stack Overflow.
    – Slate StaffMod
    Jan 17, 2023 at 21:45
14

enter image description here You can also opt in or out at any time by flipping the toggle circled above on your account settings page.

Doesn't that setting affect non-ad-related parts of the UI as well as ads?

If so, are you saying that if I don't want targeted ads, I have to live with a degraded experience in the non-ad parts of the site?


(I don't see ads anyway because of my rep level, but I'm viewing this from the perspective of a user who hasn't got enough rep to disable ads.)

6
  • My understanding is, that checkbox is what enables the "Interesting" tab's magic, aka the home page while logged in. and if i'm understanding correctly, your rep level wouldn't disable these ads, it just disables the ads that show up between the question and answers and possibly another slot on the right column.
    – Kevin B
    Jan 18, 2023 at 17:52
  • @KevinB - Thanks. The "home page" as in stackoverflow.com? I don't see any ads on that page. But again, whether I do is largely irrelevant to my question above, which is about the average user experience, not my user experience. :-) Jan 18, 2023 at 17:55
  • Yea, there should be one within js-sidebar-zone... but it's not showing for me either at the moment with the blockers down, i just get a blank space with a #hireme div. Maybe whatever ad they're trying to show there is broken :shrug:
    – Kevin B
    Jan 18, 2023 at 17:58
  • 1
    But, yes, the home page as in stackoverflow.com. my point was the reduced ads privilege/option is just reduced, not remove, so it should still be showing us ads, and i do still routinely see ads when viewing logged in with incognito, which is where these specific ad blocks would be displayed. The ads that get removed are primarily banner ads rather than blocks
    – Kevin B
    Jan 18, 2023 at 18:05
  • 7
    Apologies for the delay. We've been looking into this, and don't quite have a final answer yet. However, so far as we can tell, the "use my on-site activity" toggle hasn't controlled any on-site features since Jobs was decommissioned. That includes the "interesting" tab (cc @KevinB). As things stand right now (before release), you can flip this toggle on or off and should see no impacts to the UI on-site. (1/2)
    – Slate StaffMod
    Jan 24, 2023 at 16:44
  • 4
    After release, this option will provide an additional method to restrict the ways we target you for advertisements. However, if you don't want to see any targeted ads on the site and/or do not want us to store targeting cookies for your data, revoking your consent to targeting cookies is the canonical way to effect that change - not this toggle. (2/2)
    – Slate StaffMod
    Jan 24, 2023 at 16:44
12

The servers don't pay for themselves. So if it brings in more revenue without getting in the way of content then you have my blessing.

12

This is more of a question for the community, but, why all the hate? For me, these ads seem just as relevant and useful as all of the other random programming-related ads I see on Stack Overflow (meaning, they're really not all that interesting—I don't care about 99.9999% of ads I see, as I'm sure is the case with most people). I appreciate that they're (somewhat) clearly marked as ads, they're at least related to a topic I care about, and they aren't distracting. And, if this trial-run works, it means that a good portion of the community found these ads to be interesting, which would be another plus.

Perhaps, people have had really bad experiences with these courses? And feel that promoting them in any way degrades the value of Stack Overflow? I've never taken one, so I don't know what they're like, but I sort-of doubt their quality could be that bad (at least, it can't be worse than any of the other stuff currently being advertised).

So, I guess I'm just wondering if there's some sort of negative vibe associated with these classes, that I'm entirely unaware of, such that advertising these courses is much worse than advertising all of the other random programming junk that gets advertised.

4
  • 3
    Relatedly, advertising programming courses (assuming, of course, that they're good) seems to be a good way to provide an off-ramp for users looking for more general learning guidance that is off-topic in Stack Overflow Q&A. Recommending a way for users coming here looking for this to get it without asking off-topic questions seems like a good idea, especially if that supports the site financially.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Feb 2, 2023 at 18:47
  • 4
    My issue, as usual, is with trying to repeatedly, with almost everything they release, pretend it isn't what it is through marketspeak meant to skirt around the fact that it's just more advertising. We aren't fools.
    – Kevin B
    Feb 2, 2023 at 19:43
  • 5
    So, the issue is more with the presentation, not the idea itself? I dunno, I don't find anything misleading or "overly-marketing" about their presentation - in the first sentence, they state that this is advertisements. It's true that the title originally didn't state this, but the vast majority of the downvotes came after the title change, not before. Though, maybe you're finding something to be misleading or offputting that I'm not? Perhaps their general tone of voice? I'm curious how you would have written it differently. Feb 2, 2023 at 23:01
  • 2
    i mean, i can't really answer for why everyone else downvoted it, ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Very well could be mostly people who'd never see these ads anyway.
    – Kevin B
    Feb 2, 2023 at 23:06
6

I don't see Linked or Related questions in the layout image.

Is that just an error in the image or are those removed on questions where ads are shown?

If you plan to remove those, then please reconsider as those are very important for locating related questions.

Also if they are not removed, can you please update the image so we can comment on the positioning.

2
  • 1
    I guess the image is from some internal feature-reduced sandbox, the HNQ that are shown in the image are repeated a few times and have the wrong icons. But I agree that for the mockup it would be helpful to know how this interferes with the linked/related lists.
    – Marijn
    Jan 19, 2023 at 16:24
  • 6
    We don't plan to remove the Linked or Related questions panels (or any other existing feature) as a part of this release. Marijn's right - the screenshot is from a dev version of Stack Overflow. Bits go missing all the time. Unfortunately this means generating a 1:1 copy that is in agreement with how the site looks is quite tricky! But hopefully the provided screenshot still gives you an idea of how it fits into the layout.
    – Slate StaffMod
    Jan 24, 2023 at 15:47
5

We will base the ads on your Stack Overflow browsing history

How exactly are you implementing this? Are you sending our profile information to the course provider and then they're returning a list of courses to recommend? Or did they provide you with a list of all available courses, and the Stack Exchange servers are using information they already know to pick which courses to recommend?

In other words, does this new feature involve transferring our personal information to a third party? I know you said that you don't sell our personal information to third parties but we all know there are lots of types of transfers that don't technically count as "selling".

2
  • 6
    It's the second one - partners provide us with a course catalog, and (if consenting) we may use your browsing history to determine which courses to serve.
    – Slate StaffMod
    Jan 27, 2023 at 6:10
  • 2
    More or less, our personal information is being used as a value add to the advertiser. By advertising through SO, rather than other means, their ads in theory will be more effective because SO is (ab)using our personal data to enhance the product.
    – Kevin B
    Jan 31, 2023 at 17:21
4

Diogenes the Cynic here just with a comment about the wording of the ads.

Select online courses for you

Helpful courses for you

Popular online courses

The thing is, you aren't suggesting these courses because you genuinely, reasonably believe they will be helpful for me in particular, and you aren't showing them because they're popular. You're showing them because you're getting paid to show them.

It's not like this dishonesty is particularly egregious as far as ad copy goes, but it is dishonest. And sure, it's a kind of dishonesty that we know not to take literally, because we're accustomed to advertising being dishonest in this way. But it is dishonest.

I think this matters because Stack Overflow more than most other sites depends on the trust and cooperation of its community, and things like this work against that. If you just show adverts written in the advertiser's voice, fine; we understand that you need to show ads to keep the site running. But these ads are written in Stack Overflow's voice, saying "we" (SO) decided to show you these links from "our" (SO's) partners because "we" (SO) think they are useful and relevant. So you are training us to expect what you say to not be exactly honest, and to tune out and ignore what you say. And personally, I don't think that's worth it for you.

3

Suggestion

Part 1: Show the technology courses ads on the tag wikis too.

Part 2: Allow gold tag badge holders to provide feedback about the relevance of specific courses to the corresponding tag based exclusively on the publicly available information (course description, learning goals, demo lessons, bibliography...)

  • The images shows the link "Report this add" that apparently is to report the whole widget. This part of the suggestion implies to be able report specific courses.
  • The filter should show the most frequently shown courses related to the tag wiki, i.e. show the top 10 courses shown in last 30 days.
  • Gold tag badge holders that have a conflict of interest, i.e. they authored a course related to that tag, should mention that on their feedback.
2
  • 1
    This sounds like a good idea, but my only concern would be that the publically available information might be skewed or not enough. Course makers could make the only good park of the course available to gold tag badgers then make the rest complete garbage.
    – Michael M.
    Jan 21, 2023 at 0:11
  • @MichaelM. I agree that this suggestion will benefit from others ideas. The core idea is to someway help to close the gap between the output of the data scientists models and the perception of the people who very likely really know what is happening on each tag.
    – Wicket
    Jan 21, 2023 at 0:23

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