In a world where close votes don't exists...
I see several differences immediately, that would have to be considered. There are privileges at 50, 250, 500 and 3000 rep that become obsolete or confusing.
- 50: Flag a post. What would the purpose of flagging be in this case? Currently, a flag by a user with lower reputation dumps the question into a review queue where higher rep users can cast close votes (if needed). Without close votes, I see the review queues being used only to further down vote poor questions or cast deletion votes. The middle step of closing/putting a post on hold, is gone. The reputation gap between flagging and deleting is a VERY wide gap. Flag a post remains relevant for spam and offensive posts.
- 250: View/cast close votes on your own post. This new privilege no longer exists without close votes
- 500: Access to first post and late posts review queues. Much like the new privileges at 50, this allows users to see what others have flagged but all they can really do is upvote or down vote content. They can't flag the post for closure of poor questions.
- 3000: Cast close/reopen votes. This privilege no longer exists without close votes.
Without close votes, what is the next step in the process after a user flags a post? The community aspect of moderation loses a big part of the quality control that exists.
In my opinion, quality control would become much more focused on the up/down votes. But, I'm not sure that would be enough. There are over 8,700 questions on Stack Overflow with a score less than -5 that are open right now. Does this make the question bad and should be closed? Of these 8,700, only 300 don't have an answer at all. The other 8,400 managed to gather at least one answer. Clearly, a score of -5 isn't enough to ward off answers to questions received poorly by the community.
The other disadvantage of utilizing only upvotes/downvotes to determine the fate of a question is overcoming years of inertia when community standards change. Several of the old "book" questions, that are closed now, would fall into this category. How does the community turn around 100s or 1000s of upvotes to say that such a question is no longer appropriate for Stack Overflow? Instead of popping to an appropriate chat room and requesting a cv-pls
, users will pop in an ask for downvotes on a question. Many sub-communities around Stack Overflow utilize this process to keep their corners of the site clean. If close votes are removed, the people that want to help have one less method to do so.
Where do duplicates fall into all of this then too? Gathering enough duplicate votes on a question will close a question. If this closure no longer takes place, we'll be (more) swamped with the number of duplicates that are seen. NullPointerExceptions and floating point arithmetic errors will be all that we ever see.
Close votes are a vital part of what keeps the lowest quality questions off the site. They are a vital part of a user's progress from lurker to new user to trusted user (and everything in between). They are the aspect of the community that users have the most say in. From the time a user gets 50 rep, they can indicate a question should be closed for various reasons.