last day (16 days later) » 

11:06
0
Q: A prime example of the culture issue facing new users of the site

StromA new user posted a now deleted question, How to save random generated numbers. In essence, it is asking how to store a random number into a variable. Given the OPs statement: "I have not really tried anything because im trying to learn this without having to hit the textbook on how to save thin...

Did you flag those comments as rude or unwelcoming? Because if not, are you sure you're doing everything you can to solve the problem?
JK.
JK.
And why exactly is this 'be nice' policy not applied to the question asker? It's not nice to be asking others to do something when you simply cannot be bothered to do it yourself.
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user10316640
The post was deleted before I could flag them.
To be clear: the post was deleted because the user deleted their account.
user10316640
@JK. You cannot expect a first time poster to understand all of the rules of this site. We hope for that, but it should not be held above those who know the rules and break them.
JK.
JK.
11:06
This was an unprovoked attack on a new user - No, there was a lot of provocation. (who has since deleted their account and will probably never return) and what exactly are we missing by having this person gone? Just means we wont have a bunch more lazy questions from them.
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user10316640
@SamuelLiew, thank you for the clarification.
@JK I agree there was provocation, but nobody has the right to ignore the "Be Nice" rule. If a person is feeling provoked by the content of a page, they should close the tab, not respond.
user10316640
@JK. scaring away people is not the way to handle bad questions. That was the point of the entire post. If you scare/intimidate every person that posts a bad question, there would be no questions to be answered since everyone would be too scared to post due to the possible negative repercussions.
Flag and move on. Not enough people have gotten the memo about just not commenting on bad questions, and every jerk commenting in a jerk way doesn't require us to pontificate or weigh in on Meta.
user10316640
@Makoto, I agree with the first half of your statement, hence my post on meta; to get the word out in the only way I know how to. My apologies if you feel this discussion is unnecessary, but the provocation argument given by JK. is supported by too many people on SO, that is my point.
user10316640
11:06
@gnat, Please do not group this question with a flagging or moderation question since it involves neither of those elements. I understand you may feel a need to find a duplicate for every post in meta. Please withdraw your close flag as it is not appropriate for this post.
@Strom: Meta knows. Meta gets it. I'm kind of sick of hearing it, since the next words from anyone's keyboard are in some way aimed at vilifying Meta. The blunt fact of the matter is that Meta isn't the entire site. We're the power users, sure, but we don't make up a significant portion of the site.
@Strom: All of that to say, just flag the damn posts. Meta doesn't need to be reminded of it for the umpteenth time about what most of us who care about the site have been doing.
I am with @Makoto: flag, flag, flag. But I see your point. It is disheartening how many of these comments are posted, by high rep users as well. I flag many of those. I see them as problematic even when flagged because of the outcome you mentioned: flagging them doesn't make them disappear fast enough for new users to not see them, and when no explanation is given to OP about that behavior being wrong I can see why they delete their account. Unfriendly comments are inexcusable, independent of a posts quality.
user10316640
@Maketo, I can't just flag the posts since the post was deleted. You of the high reputation forget that low ranking people cannot view deleted posts(I had to read the comments as posted above through a 15% alpha? of the existing open window) nor flag the comments placed on them. I fully understand the limitations of Meta. I am not attempting to vilify Meta. I also understand that many users never visit Meta.
@Strom: The post wasn't deleted when you took umbrage with the comments. That was your opportunity.
user10316640
@Makoto "Meta doesn't need to be reminded of it for the umpteenth time about what most of us who care about the site have been doing." I understand; meta is the only outlet to express the frustration of the those who are trying to help but have no other venue.
11:06
@Strom If a user deletes their question due to unfriendly comments before the site can clean them up and communicate that the commenters were out of line, that's bad. For the reception of the site, for the user experience of new users, and for site culture. But what can we do to educate users? More consequences to users when getting rude flags?
user10316640
@Makoto, you are correct, but I prefer to comment first, and take action later. I try to follow this method with close votes and flags. This gives the opportunity to correct the actions. We all make mistakes... (I do NOT social media, call me old school)
Okay; I give up. I think I'm done here. If you're not going to flag the posts when you see this happen then there's literally nothing else we have to discuss here.
@Strom If you're not willing to flag rude comments as rude then you're not helping. Those flags have real consequences for the people acting in this way, your comments do not. It doesn't help that SO implements the tools we need to help enforce the be nice policy if users refuse to use them.
user10316640
@ivarni, Have you ever made a mistake? I prefer allow to the possibility of retraction or correction. This process also lets the OP know something is being done to rectify the situation. Then flag. This did not change the outcome this time, but could this stratagem help dissuade the OP from leaving in the future? Simply flagging the comment does nothing to reassure the OP.
11:06
Flagging rude / abusive comments gets those comments deleted. What more could you possibly want?
Of course I've made mistakes. I remember this one time back in 2003... but seriously if you want to comfort the OP then by all means comment but make sure to also flag.
@Strom: If you want to effect cultural change, you need to start to show less leniency to experienced users for which this sort of behavior is especially unbecoming, who have become entrenched in this culture. Don't wait until (the very unlikely outcome that) you've changed someone's mind before flagging their unkind comment. If you want to stand up for the new user, do so and flag at the same time. Should the bad comment go away prematurely, at least your comment will remain, and they will still know somebody stood up for them. The speedy deletion aspect can be discussed another time...
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Disclaimer: I used to leave all of these types of comments over many years before I realized how awful I was being and started making a concerted effort to be more welcoming on the site. I've experienced both perspectives firsthand and trust me, it's not a pleasant weight to bear. But I'm very lucky to have not required harsh consequences to change, just a lifelong gift of introspectiveness...
user10316640
@BoltClock, Thank you for your honesty and awareness. Trust me I would have flagged the posts, given the chance. Immediately after posting the rebukes, but I never got the chance. I guess my lesson is flag first, then rebuke :) . My first instinct in a situation like this is to protect the OP(standard triage, heal the worst wound first). My question to you, given proper training and forgiving consequences, would you have changed your ways earlier?
@Strom: The only reason I went on like this for years is because it took years before people like April Wensel started writing about the toxicity of the site. So... absolutely, if it had been raised sooner.
user10316640
@ModusTollens, To alleviate the problem, I would suggest a mandatory training on login, on expected behaviors(much like the HR seminars we are all familiar with) and introduce a carrot and stick approach to users. Maybe a voluntary(on both sides) mentor program, recruitment bonuses,(carrots) and a steep scare off penalty(stick).I'm thinking an 70% rep reduction for first offense against a new user(where the new user deletes the account or initial post, after confirming a rude or abusive post.), to be earned back 4 to 1 rep (forgiveness). A second offense is a reduction to 250 rep.
11:06
What do you think doesn't work with the flagging system we have today?
Stack Overflow attempted to control tone of comments on blatantly poor questions at the very beginning of the welcoming effort. They quickly dropped it though, probably because they realised that this won't work. The only reliable way to keep things civil is for regular users to flag unwelcoming comments and moderators follow them up by deleting both comments and low quality questions. "Optimizing For Pearls, Not Sand"
user10316640
@ivarni The delays in the flagging system offers no feedback to the OP.
user10316640
@gnat, your close vote without comment is part of the problem that I am describing. Do not let the new users decide(anything contrary to their thoughts or ideas is wrong.) The issue I am pointing out is the blatant bashing of ignorance, without explanation.
user10316640
@Cerbrus, Can your explain to me why this is a duplicate of a completely unrelated post?
Frankly, Strom, I believe the dupe applies in the sense that it deals with exactly the same subject: how to deal with rude/unkind comments. But I also believe this post actually lacks a proper question, and could have also have been closed as unclear. Maybe it's just me, though. Maybe you want to edit the question to make it clear what's the question this post makes, so it can be made clearer how it's not answered elsewhere? Would be happy to vote for reopening if that were the case.
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user10316640
11:06
@yivi, thank you, I agree it has no question, It was meant to provoke thought and discussion. My issue with its closure is the lack of comment on the part of the closing parties(not all of them) and the marking of it as a duplicate. My subject (read the title) was not how to deal with rude/unkind comments (Flag them and move on); but on the rude culture of this site. Ironically, this closure without comment proves my point. Small ripple in a large ocean.
I believe you are conflating things that are not actually related. Closing posts without commenting is not rude. Posting rude comments is rude, of course. And the whole post is about 4 comments. If it is not about that, then it is really unclear. Lastly, even if we are in meta, "questions" should be read more like questions, so appropriate "answers" can be posted. The Q&A format is used here as well. Good luck, bye!
"What can be done to align SO culture with common courtesy?" <- Again, root cause of snarks/rude comments is the so large amount of help/give me the code/hold my hand questions. As anywhere in any "help" system, old timers get sick of seing the amount of no effort/hastily posted things and repeating. So to align SO with common courtesy, the first courtesy would be for newcomers to read How to Ask so it may be a "treat the cause, not the symptom" correction.
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Actually, Tensibai, it's common sense to treat both. Elsewhere, but also here on SO. Rude comments are bad, let's not make excuses. Luckily there aren't that many of them, but bad things do really stick up. We need to keep flagging and deleting, so these exceptions to the commonality of acceptable behaviour disappear in the background.
@yivi Indeed, that doesn't mean to stop flagging or that rude comments should be tolerated, but if the goal is to give newcomers a better reception, they must do their part first as well and I'm convinced the amount of comment to be flagged as rude would drop.
@BoltClock I think I've said this before, but - no, I'm pretty sure you didn't used to leave comments nearly as discourteous as the first two here. I've seen you try to point to examples of your past sins before, and they were very tame indeed. A claim sometimes made in both pro- and anti-social-justice circles is that the strident moral condemnations in SJ discourse tend to induce guilt in the listeners who are most scrupulous, not those most guilty of wrongdoing. With the greatest respect, you are a clear example. The odd suboptimally-diplomatic comment is nothing to beat yourself up over.
11:06
I'm baffled by the comments here. Sure, we all get tired sometimes of the amount of bad questions that get posted, but that is never an excuse to call the OP lazy or insult them. Even when the OP starts to get inflammatory, shrug it off and move on. If you can't type something along the lines of "Please read How to Ask and show what you have tried" and/or point them towards a duplicate or two, then simply click the Back button on your mouse or browser and find another asker to assist. Damn. If "old timers get sick of seing the amount of no effort/hastily posted things", they need a break.
I've voted to reopen this. The duplicate clearly isn't asking the same question. I guess the implication of the duplicate closure is that the correct answer to this question is to perform the same actions as described in the "duplicate" - i.e. just flag the unwelcoming comments and move on - but that ought to be argued in an answer, leaving others the opportunity to offer a dissenting view, not communicated implicitly through closure. That's particularly true since this question is asking about how to enact a culture shift, not just how to deal with individual instances of discourtesy.
Prediction: having comment downvotes would kill this sort of behaviour dead within a week. It's precisely the "comments are second-class citizens" philosophy that has allowed these comments to proliferate; by design, we have no way at all to provide visible negative feedback to comments besides wading in and starting a fight in the comments section. That creates bad incentives; an abrasive minority can abuse question askers and be nearly guaranteed to get only positive feedback for doing so. The site will get the content that the system rewards, and currently it rewards smacking down noobs.
@markAmery flagging non constructive comments is the an even better way. It avoids the mud and allows moderators to clean up and have words if necessary.
11:40
@MarkAmery I've been pulling up a small sample of comments much like the ones in the question. I don't recall ever using the word lazy specifically, but I've insinuated unpleasant things about question askers in a number of ways. I don't think I want to link dump though
@GeorgeStocker Disagree, because there's never any public display of community's disapproval of the comments if they just get silently deleted. You can't enforce norms in a way that impacts any but the most dedicated users if your only tool for doing so is private mod messages.
@BoltClock I kind of suspect - based on vague recollections of comments you've pointed to before - that you restrained yourself to the point that the insinuations you see are invisible to others, and that you're holding yourself to a standard that you wouldn't hold other people to. Maybe I'm wrong - I'll leave it for you to contemplate.
11:57
@MarkAmery Perhaps given the large volume of comments I have on the site, my bad comments are indeed a drop in the ocean and I'm overestimating. But I already have links to examples, some still visible because the posts aren't deleted. The vast majority of the bad comments are mildly bad, but there are more than a few egregious ones especially from 2010-2013. I wish the mod view of user comments had a search function, because the SEDE isn't working as well as I'd like
(that same large volume means it'd be hard to find them if you were to go through my comment history on my profile - I wouldn't recommend doing so)
Here's one example that's for all intents and purposes the same as example 3:
Instead of looking for existing working code to do this, look for how to do it. Then try it yourself. Then come back here and ask if you still need help. — BoltClock ♦ Nov 23 '10 at 7:12
It's not the only example
I'd even consider this mild because the wording isn't emotionally charged in any way. But there was one particular help vampire that pissed me off and apparently remains active today, albeit not as active
That one person wasn't the only source of all my bad comments, of course. But I'm dragging this out more than I need to
@MarkAmery This is an excellent point; a similar point was highlighted recently on Brickset.com where silently deleting all bigoted comments could leave viewers with the false impression that the community was welcoming to marginalised groups and not bigoted. It's probably worth adding back to the question or any of the answers now posted
@BoltClock I’ve said similar things myself in meta answers that I recently stumbled upon. I’m happier that I have chosen a different way of communicating with new users more recently
@CodeCaster FTR that wasn't my point, I was aiming at the general "What can we do to get more courtesy" by saying that's not only on commenters, I fully agree people should better keep that for themselves or just yell at their screens than posting them, but again, I was talking about treating the cause, not the symptom
12:24
@BoltClock - that example is indeed very mild to my sensibilities (as too is example 3 in the Q). They're both at least trying to give direct feedback on what specifically the asker has done wrong, without insulting the asker. We can argue about whether that feedback is correct or useful (and indeed that may usually be the more important conversation - when asking questions, what I dread is not insults but the well-intentioned yet misguided and contradictory negative feedback from lots of people with different standards from each other and from me), but it's not _rude_.
 
2 hours later…
14:01
541
Q: When is Stack Overflow going to stop demonizing the quality-concerned users who have made the site a success?

Ian KempYes, it's another meta question about the "Stack Overflow isn't very welcoming" blog post. As someone who has been on this site for almost a decade, who has tried to post good questions, who has voted on content, who has worked the queues, all in the name of keeping the site's quality up... Jay ...

 
1 hour later…
15:31
We try and try to help users get better, and this is what they give us? We have to make reading the Help Center mandatory or something.
 
1 hour later…
16:32
@JL2210 That'd be wonderful, but there are always ways around mandatory online reading. If we require them to view the page then people will scroll down to end, if there are time limits they'll just do something in another tab until they expire, if there are questions then they'll get published somewhere with answers so that people can mindlessly copy/paste... If someone is determined to post a bad question, they'll do it, and if they're determined to ignore the help center, they'll do it.
Oof, whoever wrote comment #2, at least, ought to be suspended for a short time.
17:23
@TylerH But #1 could be useful, depending on the specific random numbers: I bet they could get some traction with a "Save the Threes" campaign.
17:59
@CraigMeier no, #1 is sarcastic and should be deleted as rude
 
3 hours later…
20:36
@TylerH I think that the comment by @CraigMeier was meant to be sarcastic itself.
20:51
If so, it just serves to underscore its inappropriateness for posting under the question

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