I have been answering questions about fairly specific technical topics and libraries - mostly ones for which I am a lead developer -- for several years.
Cool.
Being a subject matter expert does not extend you special rights. It does mean that people are likely to take your claims about the subject more seriously, as long as you demonstrate that subject matter expertise consistently, or else are at least well known (e.g. if any of those libraries are especially popular).
Over the past few days, one person (who I do not know and who does not regularly discuss the topics or tools) has edited several of my answers.
This is normal operation of the site. As described in the help center, everyone who has accumulated at least 2,000 reputation is granted the privilege of editing posts unilaterally, and everyone may at least propose edits. (Proposed edits are vetted by the community, not just the author.)
Stack Overflow is not a blogging or other publishing platform. If there is information you want to share with the world and you demand editorial control, use a site which provides that service. Then you are not even bound to the Q&A format, should you find it unsuitable.
The purpose of Stack Overflow is fundamentally collaborative. You do not get to dictate the style or tone of content you contribute to the site, any more than you would on Wikipedia.
When you post here, you grant a license to your content - to everyone in the entire world - that explicitly allows others to edit it. You additionally grant certain rights to the company not covered by the Creative Commons license.
All the answers that have been edited in this way were asked and answered more than two years ago, and that answer was accepted more than two years ago. Several answers have a few upvotes. In many of these cases, my answer is the only answer to the question.
None of this helps your case in any way whatsoever. There is no sense of urgency on Stack Overflow and we fundamentally do not care about the age of content, only about its suitability for the site (notwithstanding historical locks on very few specific questions submitted under different standards for questions). We even close questions as duplicates of newer ones, if it means we can route people to better quality answers. if anything, as an answer ages, there is more reason to edit it, so as to keep it up to date.
I would like the original answers reverted. For a few of these. I did restore the original answer but it was re-edited by a moderator. I have asked nicely to please revert the original answers in comments to the question, but it has not happened.
The request was not granted because you have no basis for it. It does not matter how nicely you ask. Your restoration was undone by the moderator because the edit was clearly in accordance with policy, whereas your rollback presumably reflected nothing more than a desire to have it your way.
Based on the comments on this question you may be interested in: Why are fellow users removing thank-you's from my questions?
Additionally based on the comments: answers on the main site [are expected never to contain any kind of meta commentary, full stop]. If you need to explain that there is a problem with the question, do not attempt to answer it. The entire point of the site is to collect usable, searchable Q&As, and not to operate a help desk. Attempting to write answers to inappropriate questions actively makes the site worse: those questions pollute search results, and the answers interfere with automatic cleanup. For more information, please read How do I write a good answer? from the Help Center.
Is there a place to report such abuse? I have a specific editor and moderator to report.
If there were any possibility of it being abusive, this would be the right place to begin the process of investigating possible abuse. In general you would be expected to have community consensus first in all but the most flagrant cases.
It is possible to go over our heads, for example by emailing the company. However, without a compelling case you will be at best perceived as wasting the time of someone who actually gets paid to care.
I do not know if there is an official policy on editing accepted answers
There is quite a bit of related policy. When you come to Meta, you are expected to have a basic awareness of the relevant policy if you are going to file a grievance. If you are simply trying to find out what the policy is, you should not present yourself as if you know that policy or as if you know you are justified in feeling aggrieved. Being a subject matter expert in whatever technical topics does not make you any kind of subject matter expert in Stack Overflow policy, any more than it makes a subject matter expert in real-world law.
Answering technical questions on SO is entirely my choice. I am under no obligation to participate in this forum at all. For the topic I focus on, there are very few people answering questions.
These things are true, and you are perfectly within your rights to leave. However, you are expected not to make a scene about it.
Why would anyone expect a volunteer subject-matter expert to keep answering questions on this forum when it is tolerated that someone with no knowledge of the subject is allowed to edit accepted answers?
Because:
- Many kinds of editing do not require knowing anything about the subject;
- All the relevant policies are applied fairly, and you may equally well edit others' content to improve the site (so long as you understand the corresponding policy);
- Such editing is a free service provided by others in good faith to improve your content, and make it more suitable for the site's Q&A format;
- Q&A pages on Stack Overflow are not private lines of communication between the person asking and the person answering, but publicly searchable
documents that have in some cases been accessed literally millions of times, and such edits can improve the experience for all of those people.
If you don't like the model, you are welcome not to participate. But after 8 and a half years and hundreds of answers, you have no real excuse for not at least understanding basic facts about the model. The relevant information is all over the place. Anyone who looks at the front page can see edits on a regular basis, for example, and it takes only 5 reputation to come here and ask more general questions (not motivated by self interest) before anything... more dramatic happens.
If the original answers are not reverted, I will delete them.
Please do not do this. Part of the point of licensing your content to the site is that you have expressly permitted the community to share it. In extreme cases, moderators are empowered to suspend your account and undelete the content.
Aside from that, what you propose in your last paragraph is completely and utterly inconsistent with the title you gave to the post. (In cases of dispute over individual posts, moderators are empowered to block further edits to the post for some cooldown period.)
I apologize to all reading this for answering here a little outside the norms of StackOverflow. This is more like a long comment than an answer ...
etc. That is 100% chit chat and was quite correctly removed. stackoverflow.com/a/68628445/325727this answer was removed by the author
. That is also 100% not allowed, you gave up the right to remove the content when you posted it - check the site rules. This change of yours was also correctly removed.It is always helpful to post a complete, minimal example of what you are trying to do. Without a complete example, only vague answers are possible.
stackoverflow.com/a/65364500/325727. It does not answer the question so do not include it in the answer. It's not a hard concept to understand. No cherry picking here. BTW if the question is vague and hard to understand, then do not answer. This is not GuessOverflow.Am I wrong or are you making your life too complicated.
. - thats chit chat and I will edit it out right now. stackoverflow.com/a/66779850/325727I apologize to all reading this for answering here a little outside the norms of the university. This is more like a long comment than a thesis statement...
"just completely baffled that "yes, I agree with the answer from X, and building on that..." is viewed as something that should be removed." - imagine if you were reading an article on Wikipedia, and you saw that phrase in the middle suddenly out of nowhere.