Skip to main content
1 of 4
John Bollinger
  • 178.2k
  • 1
  • 19
  • 23

The proposal is based on multiple doubtful premises

Our research has shown that often users hesitate to ask questions on Stack Overflow due to the fear of public, and sometimes caustic, feedback.

And that's a bad thing?

Certainly, users should not have to fear caustic feedback, but I think that such a concern is more a PR problem than anything else, especially these days. However, I challenge the apparent premise that users shouldn't hesitate to ask questions on SO at all. I can certainly see how SO corporate might take such a view, but even from that direction I think it's at least short-sighted. I hesitate to ask questions on SO,* albeit for altogether different reasons, and that's as it should be.

The thing that most distinguishes SO from the many other get-your-tech-questions-answered sites is the cadre of experts that has coalesced here to respond to and curate questions. It is because of these volunteers and their work that SO has a reputation for good answers. A long-time major concern of many of these people is how many poor questions are asked, so now Corporate wants to make users less concerned about posting questions that fail to meet SO standards?

Furthermore, to the extent that the reasons for the specific exercise include reducing review-queue pressure, the general attitude that we want to reduce users self-filtering seems counter-productive. Perhaps implementing the proposal would reduce the volume of the reopen queue, but that queue is more or less under control already, and it is one of the easier ones to review, anyway. On the other hand, focusing on reducing barriers to question-asking seems certain to increase the load on the triage, first-post, and edit queues, at least, which are more of a problem to begin with.

We want users to hesitate to post questions, at least long enough to think about the question itself, the way they are presenting it, and what their other options are for getting an answer. All segments of the SO community should want this as a means to manage the limited resources of the volunteers that make the site work. SO's efforts in this direction, such as the question wizard, have born at least a little fruit, but that does not mean we have any slack to play with.


From curators, we often hear about the time-consuming burden of manually guiding users whose questions get closed, and sometimes receiving pushback when they are just trying to help.

Then the proposal is for a how-to-get-my-question-reopened wizard? Alas, no. Elements that might fit in such a wizard do appear in the proposal, but in most respects it's still the same process, except

[Only] Privileged users (mods and high rep users) will have a path to access these questions to provide additional coaching and guidance.

In other words, the available pool of people who can provide assistance in this area will be reduced, they have to jump through extra hoops to do it, and there is no reason to expect that their attempts to help will be any better received. I don't see a single reason to think that these characteristics would make anything better for anybody.


And from moderators, we’ve heard the ask to reduce toxicity for all users through improved moderation and communication tools.

I keep hearing these words "toxic", "caustic", and similar. Frankly, I rarely see any such thing other than what users -- typically little-engaged ones -- bring with them. The story usually plays out with a user receiving negative, but acceptably polite, feedback about a question, answer, or comment, and they then responding in a hostile manner. Sometimes it builds over an extended interaction, and sometimes users who should know better are drawn in.

Askers don't like being told, however nicely, that their question does not meet our standards. No amount of guidance about how to bring it up to snuff -- when that's even possible -- mitigates that very much. They don't like being told that it has already been answered, especially when the dupe question is not a near-verbatim copy of theirs. Many seem to dislike anything other than "here's your answer".

SO has both a cultural practice and explicit mechanisms for delivering such messages, as it should. These address SO's quality objectives. That means that yes, sometimes users' interactions with SO are not to their liking. This seems most often to be the case for users with low engagement in the community, and it is common enough to have become part of SO's reputation. But it does not mean that SO itself is "toxic" or "caustic", and there's certainly no reason to think that lowering the barrier to entry, or at least appearing to do so, will improve the situation in any way.

With respect to moderator perceptions specifically, I observe that mods have much greater exposure than most users to those excessively negative interactions that do occur, because that's part of moderation. I'm certainly in favor of tools that make their lives easier, happier, and less stressful. However, I don't see anything in the proposal that I would expect to have that effect. Have mods actually asked for any of the proposed specifics?


"Lies, damned lies, and statistics"

Today on Stack Overflow, roughly 20% of questions are edited after they are closed and just 3% of closed questions are ever reopened.

I'm sure these statistics are accurate, but they don't tell an actionable story. In particular, the position that

We’d like to see more questions improved upon so that they have a better chance of being reopened and answered.

seems premised on the suppositions that

  • a significant proportion of questions that go without being reopened could have been rescued, if only the OP had been willing / able / motivated to fix them;

  • post-closure edits generally represent good-faith attempts to rescue the question; nd

  • those post-closure edits that do represent good-faith attempts to rescue a salvageable question have a poor success rate for reopening.

Some or even all of those premises might in fact hold, but I'm inclined to suspect not. It would be prudent to test them before devoting substantial time and resources to a project that looks to them for motivation and direction, even if the proposed features constituted a clear win.

Some proposed features are ill-conceived

We’d like to reconceive “closed” as “hidden” so that users can improve their question without feeling embarrassed or exposed.

I'd be more open to creating a new "hidden" status (but see also below), but I am completely against changing the existing "closed" status to have different significance and different effect on questions. For example, the longtime accepted wisdom about questions closed as dupes is that it is useful to keep them (visible). There are also closed questions that we want to keep visible because of import and / or historical significance, even though they are no longer considered on-topic. And generally speaking, closed questions that are not anyway eligible to be roomba'd often have some valuable attribute or other.

Consider also that we already have a "hidden" status. We call it "deleted". We don't want existing deleted questions to become eligible for resurrection, but functionally, "hidden" is a better description of this status than "deleted". Simply enabling those users who can see such posts in the first place (owners, high-rep users, and mods) to comment on them would produce something very like the proposed hidden status. If an existing status is to be converted to "hidden", then "deleted" is a better match. Perhaps all that is needed in addition to the commenting is to add a flag to indicate whether the question is eligible for reopening.


When a user edits a hidden question in a substantial way, it will automatically reopen (unhide) the question and return to its pre-close, public state.

Absolutely not. Perhaps there's room for some other variation on expedited reopening, but there are too many problems with automatic reopening to count. Among them,

  • it is easily exploitable
  • it will make more work for the community in many cases
  • it can be triggered by edits not intended to fix the question in the first place
  • it will often expose users to more of the kind of negative interactions that the overall proposal seeks to avoid, as their self-reopened question is rejected for a second time

Additionally, the whole idea seems to be based on the dubious proposition that a desire to avoid public scrutiny during question revision is a significant barrier to people fixing their questions. Data please?


*presently 17 questions vs. >4200 answers on SO

John Bollinger
  • 178.2k
  • 1
  • 19
  • 23