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T.J. Crowder
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I think you're headed the right direction, but it may be worth taking an incremental approach to start with, and re-evaluating based on data.

Specifically, I'd start with this: If the post is:

  • Downvoted
  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP (some minimal "substantial" metric may be needed; e.g., not just a title or tags tweak)
  • Reopened

...then notify downvoters that the question has been improved and reopened. Don't change their vote; they will if they agree. Don't notify downvoters if the post has been edited but not reopened. Reopening is a strong signal that the post has been improved.

No special placement, no automatic un-downvoting. It'll already be an active post (and if downvoters come back to have a second look, that's more activity).

If that's in place for a while, it'll generate data we can draw metrics from to see if it's doing the job or further tweaking (such as automatic vote-reversal) would be useful.


Another thing to consider doing (instead, in addition, before, or after) would be: If the post is:

  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP
  • A previous close-voter votes to reopen

...then notify other close-voters that the question has been improved and may be worthy of reopening.

That addresses the concern ImportanceOfBeingEarnest had that actively-engaged question posters who jump on improving their post wouldn't benefit from the improvement you're trying to make.


In both cases, offering opt-out of the notifications (but defaulting to opt-in) may be necessary, but only if volumes are outrageous.


And finally: Important to remove these features if they don't achieve their purpose.

T.J. Crowder
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