First of all: **thank you** for posting this to Meta *before* the change is done so that the community has the chance to provide some feedback.

Now let me address some points of this that I do not agree with, and let me explain why. I've seen some SO people complaining about feeling attacked by answers to their meta posts: this is merely *constructive criticism*. Please, *do not take it personally in any way*. I am only highlighting points I think should be re-reviewed and explaining the reason why I think so.

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

I don't understand how this is necessarily considered a bad thing. If anything, in my experience, this spurs me into doing the needed research and diving deep into the problem to make sure I did not leave anything to the doubt before even thinking about asking a question here. Hesitation to ask for help whenever a problem arises is exactly what makes me a decent programmer: I am able to thoroughly research and solve problems *by myself*.

User John Billinger also explained this very well in [their answer][1].

I don't think this is a problem, but most importantly: even if it was a problem, it's still not something that can be changed by modifying the system. If you post mindless generic questions, you **are** going to get critiques. There is **no system** in which this would not happen. Criticism is something that is solely controlled by the users. Continuously changing the voting or closing system will not reduce critiques to bad questions in any way. It will only cause *more confusion*.

**All this shuffling of rules only confuses users**. This has come to the point that I often feel like it's better to comment on a question explaining why it's bad and linking to help pages instead (or in addition of) casting a close vote, because I currently most of the times have no idea about which new reason should be chosen in which exact context.

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> Today on Stack Overflow, roughly 20% of questions are edited after they are closed and just 3% of closed questions are ever reopened. We’d like to see more questions improved upon so that they have a better chance of being reopened and answered.

This really looks like the classical "let's throw some random statistics in there without understanding what they mean".

Again, this is not something that you can control changing some rules here and there. If someone posts a bad question, chances are that the question itself is bad, and no formatting or addition of information will help salvage it. If the user edits the question *into a different one*, then they should have asked a new question to begin with.

In addition to this, I feel like this also happens mainly because users just "give up" and don't even bother to go back to edit their question after it gets closed. This, again, is not something you can control changing the system. It's up to the single user to put effort into their question.

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> We’d like to reconceive “closed” as “hidden” so that users can improve their question without feeling embarrassed or exposed. It’s a gentler way to remove a low quality question from general visibility while giving the author a chance to edit it. 

Changing the word "closed" to "hidden" doesn't do any good on its own, and things could get more confusing for new users. This is a really hard thing to do right, and I hope you have a good plan on how to do it. It feels like an improvement, but it's hard to pull off.

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> 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. Additionally, a question can only be automatically reopened once. Any subsequent reopens would require review through the reopen queue.

**BAD**. This is bad. I don't see how this would help the already overwhelmed review queue for close votes. It will merely create new open posts that need to be re-closed. To my eyes, this only exposes the system to abuse. Again, the fact that, as you say, "only 3% of closed questions are ever reopened" doesn't necessarily mean that they *should have been* reopened in the first place. 

Additionally, I don't know what kind of next-generation machine-learning empowered AI you guys managed to come up with, but I don't really think it's possible to discern what a "substantial" edit means, and this *will* therefore unequivocally cause false positives (and false negatives).

What *I* would suggest, is to somehow notify people who have originally voted to close the question, saying something like: "Hey, this question that you previously closed was edited and it wasn't just a 10 characters edit, could you please go take a look if it's worth reopening?". It could be an opt-out feature, a non-intrusive different kind of notification, or something else. It could have a timeout threshold. It could really be done in 100 different ways, so I'm just trying to plant the seed here, not saying that this *is* the solution.


  [1]: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/395894/3889449