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Commonmark migration

This is absolutely a problem. I have a lot of difficulty finding questions that I feel are worth answering.

I agree that the closure system simply can't keep up with the volume of dross (see all the "Eeek! My close queue is too big!" meta questions), and it offers little to no mechanism for moderating novice level questions which are low quality but not without value.

I'll take a stab at summarizing the main points raised in the question; please correct if I've missed or misinterpreted something.

  • Quality questions get buried under the volume of poor questions.
  • Quality answers are hard to come by, because the proportion of highly knowledgeable users is low.
  • Knowledgeable users are likely to become frustrated and discouraged by the sheer volume of poor questions.
  • Non-knowledgeable users receive enough positive feedback to encourage them to participate more, even if their contributions are of lower quality.
  • There are either no or insufficient mechanisms in place to manage the other problems.

These are issues which any mass consumable support resource will encounter once it reaches some popularity threshold. I really have no ideas for a true solution. Lots of things could be done to address the symptoms: dole out more close votes, better algorithms to identify poor questions, stricter question bans, etc. None of these attack the root of the problem, and many of them have undesirable side effects.

The goal: to limit the number of [visible] questions to sane amount.

The solution: There ought to be some sort of ghetto for all the too localized questions.... But - for all the goodness sake - somewhere else!

StackOverflow is that ghetto.

It's reached sufficient critical mass such that these problems will likely never go away. I'm not suggesting that nobody should attempt to improve things, but we should be honest with ourselves about the situation. Is there anything that can be done beyond damage control? Of course, good management of the issue goes a very long way, and the system in place does a great job when considering the scale it has to cope with. Additionally, it's not all bad: the sheer volume makes it a great data repository and sandbox for online crowd control methods.

Despite some of what I've just written, I'll pitch an idea which attempts to achieve the stated (and implicit) goals directly. Bear in mind, I'm suggesting this for the sake of argument only, in an attempt to approach this from another angle and provide food for thought about the underlying problems and motivations affecting the community. I am highly doubtful that this is a good idea and am not seriously suggesting it be implemented.

Quite simply, implement the converse of sectus' answer. Create a new site, say Experts.StackOverflow.com. Rather than attempting to prune poor questions from SO, prune excellent ones, as this is much more scalable.

Experts would necessarily be a gated community, with some kind of bar to meet before participation is allowed, though everyone would be able to read the content. For example, a user would gain Experts permissions after achieving, on StackOverflow, X reputation, Y amount of time on the site, and Z collection of badges. Or, say, require N good quality posts, determined algorithmically, or even a human vetted nomination system. The details don't matter. Having a proven track record on SO ensures a certain quality of user, meaning most of the enumerated problems won't occur or will be severely reduced.

"Experts" carries a positive connotation; nobody would want their question migrated to Novices, but users would get an ego boost seeing it get migrated to Experts. However, there would likely be an influx of meta questions soliciting access and complaining about the barriers to entry.

The biggest drawback is the draw of Experts. Many knowledgeable users might flee there and abandon StackOverflow. It essentially creates a refuge for skilled programmers to sit aloof from the unwashed masses. I very much doubt that is the kind of attitude StackExchange wishes to promote. There are ways to address this, both positively and negatively. Have Experts' rep add to SO's, require continued SO participation to enable Experts access, etc.

One other important flaw to acknowledge is that it still doesn't solve the basic problem. What happens when the Experts community gets large enough for quality to start degrading?