I find the Bitcoin stackexchange a gold mine of information about the Bitcoin network. Unfortunately the large number of good questions and answers is dwarfed by the much larger number of poor questions and answers.
I'm concerned valuable information is harder to find for a visitor and good contributions are not put forward as much as they would deserve compared to the rest of the content. I think this may create a negative feedback loop: if what's put forward to new visitors is lower quality content, they are less inclined to start contributing good questions and answers. The same goes for keeping active contributors interested. To be honest, the state of the landing page is sometimes quite depressing.
I think we've got three main types of questions on this site, with some nuances between them:
- Good questions. They sometimes invite long answers, sometimes concise and precise answers. They aren't necessarily well researched. They are just relevant and not redundant. Here is a few examples:
- Bad questions. Those are either poorly formatted, display no effort or understanding of the topic at hand, are generalistic programming question ("can you do my job/homework for me?"), etc. A couple instances (see especially the version before Hannah tried to salvage them):
- "Mildly bad" questions. Those are in the middle (and most of the time closer to bad than good). But for some reason they usually get a (most of the time also poor) answer. They ask for the thousandth time about tpub vs xpub vs ypub. Ask about something unrelated to the Bitcoin network. Ask about how to use a specific software with no context. Talk vaguely about a seemingly plausible situation where an answer could clear up a possible confusion, but the question is so confused it's not possible to give an appropriate answer. A few examples:
- Hello, I want to know if they use blockchain and if I have to pay any transaction fees
- Sent BTC to public key instead of my address
- What is the difference from Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin Cash ABC? Its so confusing for noobs
- Copay wallet transaction history unavailable?
- The transaction is still 0confirmation
- From Edge to Poloniex
- Blockchain vs. Banks: which one has more affordable transaction fees?
- I am trying to solve a wordsearch but i cant get the words in order
- Error when mining with MacMiner
- Is it true that a cryptocurrency exchange could freeze any account with suspicious bitcoins?
- Where did my bitcoin go?
- How much bitcoin do companies have on their balance sheets?
- Coinbase account closed. Transfering to bitcoin wallet
I didn't put too much time into compiling these lists of examples for each category. I might update them as i encounter new, more illustrative, ones. But i trust any active contributor to this site would have instances in mind for each category.
The issue with those questions is that since there seems to be a tiny bit of something relevant, and there is usually an answer, it's not clear what to do. Of course one obvious answer is to edit to improve the question if possible and if one finds out they can't, suggest to close them. But we get so many bad questions that it would basically become a full time job.
Another recommendation is to simply downvote poor questions (and answers). But this needs a coordinated effort to achieve anything. Worse yet, a non-coordinated effort costs a contributor its internet points. Whereas answering a poor question with a poor answer earns you the internet point for an accepted answer even if nobody upvotes you. edit: @Murch points out downvoting questions is actually free. It's not the case for answers though.
Therefore it seems the incentives aren't quite right: a contributor trying to fight against the load of poor questions and answers on this site would see their reputation decrease while another actually feeding this bad feedback loop would increase their reputation. So we see very little downvotes and a lot of poor questions get answered.
Do other contributors share my concern about the load of bad, or mildly bad, questions we get on this site? Do you also share my analysis that while obviously bad questions can be flagged or closed, mildly bad ones often are not, worse they are often answered, and thereby become by far the most common threads? Is there anything we can do to improve this situation?