11:02 PM
What happened in 2014 to cause a drop of more than 20% in answers over 3 months? — NotThatGuy 1 min ago
Does the word 'thanks' change the meaning of your question? No. So only include text that directly forms the question, nothing else. — JK. 31 secs ago
yes it does. when you ask someone for something without saying "thanks" you are giving an order, which is rude. "Thanks" is a simple way to show a minimum respect. If answers and comments were given by a.i. then thanking would be superfluous, but as long as the community is made by human beings, that thing matters. — Prefijo Sustantivo 49 secs ago
It is helpful to think of Stack Overflow as being more like Wikipedia than Twitter. You don't thank people for contributing to a Wikipedia article, and so a "thank you" should not appear in posts here, either. If you want to actually thank someone, do so using the vote arrows. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@BobbyA: Accusations against Tim are inappropriate here. Also - unfounded. Sarah Chipps has by now had her spats with the community - she knows at least what the negative feedback looks like (perhaps at times also positive feedback?) - for herself. — einpoklum - reinstate Monica 6 secs ago
I had the same thoughts about being more likely to downvote if question downvote rep isn't also increased. I can easily justify a "lack of research effort" downvote on a lot of questions. — Peter Cordes 1 min ago
@CodyGray In wp nobody asks you to post things. You just publish and if someone knows better than you, then he or she makes the corrections. The flow in s.o. is very different: it begins with a human being making a question to a group of peers, and in the vast majority of cases, a single response is not expected to be the final solution. It is required collaboration among human beings for a period of time, that could span over years, in the form of iterative question-response interactions, to finally give and answer — Prefijo Sustantivo 1 min ago
"Perhaps now would be a good time to bring forward the "3-votes to close" change that was trialled." Absolutely! I am hugely in favor of this; always have been. My sources tell me that there is a good chance that may be introduced as a permanent feature. Along the same lines, another thing I desperately want is to expand the franchise to gold badge holders, and possibly even silver-badge holders. Gold badge holders in a tag should be able to instantly close a question for any of the off-topic, too broad, or unclear reasons. Same for a single silver-badge holder plus one other user. — Cody Gray ♦ 21 secs ago
Good questions do tend to get answered so the problem of good but unanswered questions is mostly hypothetical. When looking for duplicates, a garbage confusing question can make it a worse target. Especially if it means answers to the real question are cluttered with addressing other problems and side-tracks so even the answers aren't a good simple answer to a single problem. So depending on context, they can be almost as useful in the long run. — Peter Cordes 1 min ago
You raise a good point about voting rings. I'm not sure I'd go so far as to say "incentivizes", but it definitely makes voting rings easier to spin up. Fortunately, us moderators do a pretty decent job of stamping these out. We have functional tools for detecting voting rings, and we are pretty vigilant in enforcing the rules surrounding the sanctity of voting. (Some of the moderators who recently resigned were among the best in the business at dealing with these, so that's a loss we definitely feel, but we'll continue to do our best in reigning these in.) — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Historic questions that don't meet today's standards can and should have historical locks applied to them. This will prevent any future voting. Unfortunately, there is another policy that was introduced (and largely celebrated by the community) that complicates this: you get to keep the reputation you earned for historical posts, even if those posts are deleted or locked. This sidesteps a lot of whining about content curation, but is clearly a double-edged sword. On the other hand, rep was never a perfect metric in the first place, and even with +5 rep, users were still making bank off these. — Cody Gray ♦ 19 secs ago
11:46 PM
Hmm, I don't write "You're welcome." at the end of my answers. Am I being rude? — Don't Panic 37 secs ago
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