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Don't drown out signal with noise

The purpose of downvoting is to quickly clear bad questions from the front page of the site (as well as other areas). There are far more bad questions that need to be downvoted than there are good questions that are worthy of being upvoted.

If we were to simply upvote good questions instead of downvoting bad ones, then the front page will still be flooded with low-quality questions...they won't go away, and they won't be crowded out by good upvoted questions, because those are in the tiny, tiny minority.

Similarly, bad questions simply cannot be allowed to remain on the site, even for just a few weeks. There's just too many of them. They'd crowd out all of the good content. Stack Overflow currently gets 7000-8000 new questions per day. There are very few good questions in that number that are worth keeping around.

Controlling users who can't ask good questions

Similarly, downvoting, closing, and deletion are the mechanisms by which the site controls users who can't ask good questions. All of those actions point out problem users to the system, which will then take measures to warn them of their post quality so that they can hopefully improve...otherwise they get question banned, and they stop flooding the site with their low-quality posts.

If we stopped taking those measures against problem users, then they'd just persist around the site longer than they should be allowed to, and spamming their low-quality content the whole way, making it harder to experts to find questions and other users that are actually worth helping.

Helping the few users who can be helped

There's a special proposal brewing in Area 51:

  • Stack Overflow Academy

    Proposed Q&A site for programmers who want to learn how to ask good questions on Stack Overflow.

Consider pitching in to help see if we can create a viable community to help new users become better at asking good questions on Stack Overflow.

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