Before reading this post, may I ask that you please read [Teresa’s post today](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/413358/the-foundations-of-collectives-and-its-future) very thoroughly? I’ll wait. 

----------

With that out of the way (and I think it’s critical to understand that history to see how we get to this point), let’s talk through the goals for this post and the work already done.

As background, when we introduced Articles on Collectives, some community members self-organized to create a set of rules. This is, to steal a phrase, A Good Thing. I want to encourage community ownership over these rules and guidelines. In addition to that self-organization, I introduced a conversation about the types of articles that we had identified, to find out if there were use cases we had missed.

## What has happened so far?
Here is a summary of what they have accomplished so far:
First, three questions were exposed. These three questions are things that we have debated a great deal internally, and I lay out after each what I think our feeling is, but I’m looking forward to hearing more from you about them. 
 
As this all happened, our team has been building what we’re calling the “Article Proposal Flow” - it’s not far from being ready to go. This is exciting, because it allows collective members to draft their own articles, accept feedback on them, and submit them for inclusion in the collective.

The three questions that were exposed:

1. [Your article is in another castle](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/411008/your-article-is-in-another-castle-should-this-be-allowed): should link-only articles be allowed? 

    > **Staff feeling: no.** Link-only articles are not acceptable. Content must be resident on the collective. However, it does not necessarily need to be (but ideally is) content written exclusively for the collective. That is, repurposed articles would be allowed, but they must be resident on Stack Overflow, in the collective. It’s also important to recognize that anything posted to our site is licensed under the Creative Commons license as well.

2. [Is it acceptable to have 'thanks' in an article](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/409281/is-it-acceptable-to-have-thanks-in-an-article)?

    > **Staff feeling: it depends on the context.** If an article solicited opinions on something, and found them helpful, it might be reasonable to hear a “thanks” to the community for jumping in to the prior article. Outside of a situation where there was a substantive piece of work done, though, we would encourage article writers to not include Thanks.

3. [Are articles allowed to be off-topic?](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/408912/are-articles-allowed-to-be-off-topic) 

    > **Staff feeling: articles should be germane to the topics included within the collective, and should relate to one of the tags that is included within the collective, and within the greater, already established scope of SO.**

Next, we discussed the [proposed types of articles](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/412005/lets-draft-some-guidelines-for-articles-in-collectives) that would be included: knowledge articles, and how-to guides. 

Through community work, a set of proposed rules [was advanced](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/411010/what-are-the-quality-standards-for-articles/) (which I have grouped into families below:
 
### Rules to prevent spam:
1.0 Articles must back up their claims with facts and references
 
### Rules related to topics and content: 
2.0 - Articles should contain sufficient context for the problem that they are intending to address. They should focus on a practical problem that programmers actually face.

2.1 - Articles must fully address the problem they are intending to discuss. Readers should be able to get a clear understanding of how to solve their problem from reading the article.

2.2 - Topics that would require extremely lengthy articles to address in full should ideally be split into multiple articles. If there is other context required, the articles should clearly indicate what context is needed.

2.3 - Articles may be about any of the following topics, provided that they are clearly related to the topic of the collective:
- Algorithms
- Tools or software libraries used primarily by programmers
- Specific programming problems

2.4 - Articles cannot be about any of the following:
- General computing
- Network or server administration
- Legal advice
- Opinion-based topics
- Hypothetical or speculative articles, rants, etc.
- Anything not directly related to programming
- Programming topics not directly related to the topic of the collective

2.5 - Articles must be more than just links. If they contain links, they must have sufficient context.

2.6 - The title must summarize the content

2.7 - Articles must be in the primary language of the target site that they accompany (currently English, since collectives "accompany" the main SO site; if there's ever a collective for another site, like the Russian SO site, it must be in the primary language of that site). Articles should use good grammar, spelling, and punctuation to the best of the writer's ability.

2.8 - Articles must follow the Code of Conduct - abusive or insulting language will not be tolerated.

2.9 -  Articles may not engage in excessive or undisclosed self-promotion

2.10 - Articles should not be exact duplicates of existing Q&As or articles. (We need to decide whether we want "canonical articles" or "canonical Q&A" for commonly-asked questions).
 
 
### Rules that are no longer needed
3.0 (Deprecated) We need to make a decision about product announcements, news, app store policies, etc.  Rule 11 was removed because the announcements feature was removed from Collectives.
 
### Gaps
We have also identified some significant gaps in the proposed rules, which we aim to close through this process as well.  Outstanding questions for us include: 

GAP 1 - What is the role of site moderators in collectives, and what should their accessibility level to articles be? What expectations exist of them and are they appropriately resourced to fulfill those expectations?

GAP 2 - In case of a dispute between the author of an article and a client company, what is the correct escalation process to get to a positive outcome?  I suspect that this will involve moderator teams communicating with Community Managers, but I think we should evaluate some potential possibilities.


GAP 3 - The role of the feedback button in articles: is it to give feedback on the topic of the article, the content of the article, or can it be used for anything related to collectives (broadly construed).  If constrained to the topic of the article or the content of the article, what is the appropriate path to give feedback about the collective to either Stack Overflow or the client company?

GAP 4 - Additional use cases: how (and should) to allow for things like *sharing* best practices on a technical topic, *comparing* two or more technical implementations, and presenting the real-world use of a technology (ie, case study/novel use case).
 
I’d also like to be transparent that we are approaching this set of rules with three primary stakeholders: Stack Overflow (the company), the Community, and clients. We have done extensive research into the clients’ needs and will be exposing what we’ve learned from some of that as we talk about these proposed rules. 
 
I’m very interested in hearing some thoughts from this community - from you - on these proposals, but also in identifying holes in what is already identified.
 
### A couple of thoughts on participation:
Proposed Rule 3.0 has already been dealt with: we took announcements out of the scope of collectives at this point. So I think we can put that topic aside for now. 
 
If you have feedback about any of the other proposed rules, I invite you to leave an answer (probably one per person, with all of your suggestions for the rules incorporated within) and tell us what you think. This includes suggestions for new rules that we can discuss and consider adding to the finalized set of rules.