I've run into the same issue, and feel this is a larger issue than "They're mean to me." The net's plagued with crap code all over, it replicates like epidemic into production by less knowledgeable programmers. StackOverflow has attracted a high number of people who know what they're doing, we've also attracted a high number of people who want to learn from then, but then lastly, we've attracted a group of people who are interested in gaining rep to brag to their friends and boast about their 1337 5|<177z. Here's an example I ran into yesterday: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6905819/jquery-modal-confirmation-dialog-not-submitting-form/7002666#7002666 The problem the poster had was essentially caused by over-riding the default DOM methods in JS, what was his answer? Just use ajax rather than submit the form correctly. His answer was "don't fix it," and someone upvoted it as useful and correct. So what's the problem? Future trend of low-quality answers, a resource known to be full of wrong solutions, bad advice, and situations like this question http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7011155/separated-numbers-three-to-three where nobody cares about learning, just fastest answer out the door whatever. We're headed into a bold new century, with a new set of "lol, mysql injection exploits" everywhere because we're using string concatenation, magic quotes, and mysql_exec, even though it's wrong, it's **proliferated**, and that leads to the shit we see everywhere. If we make known that shit is wrong, we have removed proliferation of it, and thus, people don't repeat this issue.