Speaking as someone who's been pretty active on the site for about 5 years, I don't get all the moaning and groaning. I mean, maybe it's because I'm primarily a JavaScript/Python developer, two languages marketed towards beginners (for better or worse) and thus the tags I frequent always have been and always will be full of garbage questions and garbage answers. So I don't really see things getting markedly worse from being nicer to new people (I'm unconvinced that they *could*). And, mea culpa, since the push I've....been nicer to new people. Not that I didn't down-vote, vote-to-close, comment, etc....just...without the sarcasm. And although I've already voiced the sentiment elsewhere here on meta, I don't understand why the tradeoff is always framed as binary, as if it's pristine-but-sparsely-populated-bastion-of-perfection on one hand and an anything-goes-garbage-dump on the other. Codes of conduct get a bad rap, and sometimes deservedly so, but is this the hill to you all really want to die on? I mean, I'm on the site almost everyday, and have been for *years*. But you know what? If all the naysayers are right and this ruins SO, well, my life won't be over. This is an existential crisis, a battle for the *meaning* of Stack Overflow. But does it need to be? Is your daily interaction with the site *profoundly* changed? For the worse?