-59

This is quite straightforward, but I cannot seem to find anyone else asking this: How do I keep people from making edits to the body of my posts?

While I somewhat see what Stack Overflow is going for by allowing other people to edit posts that aren't their own, it must have been clear from the outset that it's a terrible idea. There is a reason why no other website does this: it opens the door to weird and/or unhelpful edits. People could simply ask the original poster to make edits themselves, or it could be up to specific people to ask users to do so when a post is really badly written,... In any case, I don't want it and I find that it distracts from actual question-answering.

35
  • 6
  • 14
    "it opens the door to weird and/or unhelpful edits" These kinds of edits are more likely to be made with users having less than 2000 reputation, which is why we have a review queue called "Suggested Edits" in place. Moreover, look at the plus side! It allows for grammatical fixes, dead link fixes and so much more!
    – Anonymous
    Commented Jun 30 at 22:48
  • 29
    You haven't heard of Wikipedia? That rather famously allows everyone to edit all the pages. Commented Jun 30 at 22:54
  • 22
    After having a look at the revision history of your posts, you appear to be the one making "weird and/or unhelpful" edits and rollbacks after other people do reasonable jobs of trying to clean up noise from your posts. You should be inviting peoples' edits, not trying to stop them. Commented Jun 30 at 22:57
  • 8
    "How do I keep people from editing my posts?" By making your posts on a site that is not Stack Overflow. Please read: Why can people edit my posts? How does editing work? Commented Jun 30 at 22:58
  • 25
    You can prevent people from making edits to your posts by making them perfect and in line with site guidelines. If there's nothing to edit, people can't make edits.
    – Dharman Mod
    Commented Jun 30 at 23:00
  • 7
    It's clear you are using the edit system as you would submit posts to a forum, responding to or requesting questions to be closed instead of accepting the improvements to your question made by other users. Your track record on the quality of your questions isn't a great start. Commented Jun 30 at 23:26
  • 5
    You edited a question to request closure in order to prevent others from editing it. As SecurityHound pointed out, this is inappropriate as an edit. In addition, closing your question does not prevent others from editing it. Anyone who can edit your question before the closure can make an edit after the closure just as fine. Having a closed question also counts against you and may bring you closer to a question ban. I suggest not doing that again. Commented Jul 1 at 4:52
  • 7
    Actually, you're now the one committing vandalism by rolling back your questions to revisions that contain a bunch of unneeded cruft. Do you think Wikipedia would allow you to edit in things like "I am a beginner so please have mercy, but feedback is welcome"? Commented Jul 1 at 9:25
  • 11
    @AengusBall as far as answerers are concerned sentences like "I am a beginner" and similar provide no useful information and are summarily ignored. What answerers might find useful is someone demonstrating knowledge (or the lack thereof) of a particular concept from the text of their question. Commented Jul 1 at 9:36
  • 7
    "I can't reply to individual people" - you can if you ping them by typing @ followed by their username with no spaces, as Abdul did in his comment. Note that you can only ping one person per comment. "Pointing out that I am a beginner has the purpose of informing the people answering the posts that the poster is a beginner and can't be held to high standards." - as far as I'm aware, the same question standards apply to everyone on Stack Exchange, regardless of their experience level.
    – F1Krazy
    Commented Jul 1 at 9:41
  • 6
    "he majority of the edits made to my posts made them less understandable." - no, no they have not. Unless you're counting your rollbacks as edits. I genuinely can't understand how you can possibly see things this way. "Pointing out that I am a beginner has the purpose of informing the people answering the posts that the poster is a beginner and can't be held to high standards." No, it doesn't. First off, it does not matter to us that the poster is a beginner. Second, yes, you can, and are. This site is not a discussion forum. Commented Jul 1 at 9:42
  • 8
    "Wikipedia has a very robust system to fight vandalism." So does Stack Overflow; part of that is the ability to rollback said edits, another is that we have a review system so that those with <2k reputation can't just change content. We also have moderators who deal with exceptional cases, who can lock posts if it's needed to stop anyone editing them temporarily (not to fulfil your request you ask here) or in extreme cases suspend a user who has has vandalised multiple posts and/or hasn't stopped after being reached out to.
    – Thom A
    Commented Jul 1 at 9:51
  • 17
    The experience you have is irrelevant to others; it's not context. We, the community, would answer the question the same if you have 10 seconds or 10 years of experience.
    – Thom A
    Commented Jul 1 at 10:04
  • 12
    Adding noise to your posts such as your experience level is a good way to drive answerers away and attract downvotes to your posts. Stick to the point and don't add unnecessary "context".
    – Dharman Mod
    Commented Jul 1 at 10:45

3 Answers 3

30

This is quite straightforward, but I cannot seem to find anyone else asking this

That's hopefully because other people read the Help Center article which clearly explains the related policy.

How do I keep people from making edits to the body of my posts?

You don't, because it is a deliberately designed feature of the site.

While I somewhat see what Stack Overflow is going for by allowing other people to edit posts that aren't their own, it must have been clear from the outset that it's a terrible idea.

Well, no; we generally think it's proven itself to be a quite good idea. It's been almost 16 years now, by the way. Everyone's had ample time to reconsider and nobody has brought any serious arguments against the feature that are more substantial than "my post was edited and I don't like the change".

There is a reason why no other website does this: it opens the door to weird and/or unhelpful edits.

No, this is completely incorrect. In reality, countless other websites do it. You might have heard of one of the bigger ones. There are literally multiple competing off-the-shelf software solutions created specifically so that people can make websites that work that way.

We in fact rein it in considerably by requiring review and approval for edits submitted by users below 2000 reputation.

People could simply ask the original poster to make edits themselves, or it could be up to specific people to ask users to do so when a post is really badly written,

There is, by design, no direct message system here, so that would require using comments that would have to be cleaned up later, creating extra burden. Delegating the responsibility for asking is absurd, adding bureaucracy for no benefit. Besides, most people wouldn't make the changes, but it's important for the quality of the site that they get made.

But more importantly, what you've missed is:

... In any case, I don't want it

Sorry. To be blunt, you aren't the one who gets to make the decision. When you post here you license your content both to the company that operates the site, and to the public.

and I find that it distracts from actual question-answering.

If you think an edit made your post worse, it is your responsibility to a) demonstrate how, and b) understand the process for contesting an edit.

However, edits such as this one which remove noise are perfectly in keeping with policy, and make your question better - i.e., more in line with the site's standards and goals as described on the tour and in How to Ask (and How to Answer).

Because the question isn't there simply so that you can get an answer. It's there to help build a useful, searchable Q&A reference for everyone.

0
19

In most situations, you don't prevent others from editing your post.

Remember, this isn't a personal help site, but rather a question and answer site, where the goal is to craft well-constructed, focused and clear questions that can then receive well-constructed, focused and clear answers, questions and answers that are helpful to all. So for this reason, the site allows "trusted users" those with enough reputation, to be able to edit others posts, and allows newer users to propose edits that are then reviewed by trusted users. Most edits are made in an effort to make a question clearer and better formatted, to try to make it a better question for the site.

There are exceptions, of course, such as when someone strives to completely change the meaning of a question, or tries to inject rude or inappropriate content. For this, you would likely need to flag the moderators.

4
  • What is a better place for me to ask for help, where people having a similar issue can see the help I got and benefit from it? Commented Jul 1 at 10:38
  • @AengusBall This is the place to get SO help & there is meta.SE for all-sites help. But learn how to google using 'site:' so you can search in a site's /help pages & meta site Q&A & similarly both for meta SE: site:stackoverflow.com/help site:meta.stackoverflow.com site:meta.stackexchange.com . Also read all the help pages for a site. And SO help has a list of SO FAQ Q&A.
    – philipxy
    Commented Jul 1 at 11:03
  • That's not what I asked about, but thanks for your time anyway. Commented Jul 1 at 11:07
  • 4
    What you aren't understanding here is that "me to ask for help" and "people having a similar issue can see the help I got and benefit from it" are at cross purposes. Asking a question that can better help others requires accepting that it is not about you. Commented Jul 2 at 1:04
16

You can't really prevent people from making edits to your posts as that would go against the core principle of the site. Stack Overflow is community-driven collaborative site. People must be able to freely edit posts to perfect them.

1
  • 8
    @aen The edits made by community were not vandalism. Your rollbacks are a form of vandalism but I see you just disagree with community standards so they're not malicious rollbacks. However as explained here, the edits are perfectly inline with our guidelines so please don't roll them back again.
    – Dharman Mod
    Commented Jul 1 at 10:59

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .