> If you read through this, you see that there is a "come to
> Jesus"-moment for the company in that it realizes that the UX is
> actually the culprit when it comes to perceived unwelcomeness to the
> site.

I have read the blog post, and I agree that it attributes the perception of unwelcomeness to the UX.  And perhaps that indeed reflects a watershed moment, with the company -- or at least Sara -- realizing that the problem is not so much the users as the platform. But I think the true insight is more specific: that no matter how valid and polite, negative feedback can be taken personally by the receiver, especially in the aggregate.  And I think that misses a broader truth, which I will get to shortly.

> Embarrassment is more cultural than you realize.

Agreed.  In particular, I agree that there are regional / national / ethnic cultural characteristics that leave some people more prone to embarrassment than others, and also that make some people more prone to internalize criticism or to perceive it as a rebuff or even an attack.

> content quality as a goal is at odds with reducing friction.

Absolutely.  Enforcing any criteria at all for discriminating between wanted / accepted content and unwanted / rejected content necessarily means that content submissions will sometimes be rejected.  If someone makes a submission in good faith, but it does not meet our criteria then it *should* be rejected. The best we can hope for in such a scenario is that the submitter won't take that *too* negatively.

> First, I don't think any of us really had a problem with policing the
> site. We had a problem with what felt like a Herculean task

... but ...

> That was a rough last year...

I agree.  But the point I want to emphasize is that we primarily have a culture problem going on here.  That's the origin of the problem with new user experience and perceptions, and in the last year or so it became clear that there is also a culture gap between the backbone membership and SE-the-company.

SO used to bill itself as being for professional and enthusiast programmers, and there has been a fair amount of parsing and interpretation of what that was supposed to mean. What it actually *did* mean in practice is that the primary audience and membership was [**hackers**][1].  The Jargon File, to which the linked definition belongs, contains and links to a great deal of insight on hacker ethos and culture that is relevant to understanding the clash we're dealing with.

Here are some of the characteristics typical of the people who made SO what it is:

 - They are largely meritocratic, and they ascribe merit mainly for technical skill and contributions to the community.

    Our reputation system dovetails with this.  It's true that high-rep users receive more deference, more respect, and sometimes more slack than newbies and low-rep users.  They've earned it, and they are reasonable to expect it.

 - That does not by any means imply that they are exclusionary or unwilling to help.

    Hackers *thrive* on contributing and helping, and they delight in recognizing the talent and contributions of others.  Those are some of the characteristics that made SO work in the first place.  On the flip side, however, they have little patience or respect for those who are perceived to be draining the community instead of contributing to it.

 - But hackers dislike drudgery and wastefulness, such as solving the same problem twice.

    ... or answering questions for which answers are already readily available.  So indeed yes, some members do actively look for questions to close, especially as dupes.  But this is not a means of spurning new members.  Rather, it is an act of service to the community.

Many of our ideas about what constitute a good question revolve around revolve around these points.  Good questions give something to the community and convey respect for it, whereas bad questions drain it, or at least seek to do.

There is much more than I can convey in this medium and context, even speaking in generalities as I have done.  But the point is that although SO culture has idiosyncrasies, it is not an isolated, emergent phenomenon. Rather, it is an extension and reflection of the values, history, and shared culture of the people for and by whom SO was built.  This is the wellspring from which come longtime members' threats to leave SO, and demands that the people setting policies and making plans be active in the community.  Those aren't idle threats or empty wishes.

I'm convinced that most people who find SO cold and unwelcoming do so because they genuinely do not fit in.  They are generally treated just like anyone else, and that's different from how they would like to be treated.  And that's ok.  Active participation on SO isn't for everyone, no matter how much SE-the-company would like it to be.  We can be nice to everyone, but we cannot make them all comfortable, not and still be SO.


  [1]: http://catb.org/jargon/html/H/hacker.html