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I feel like I'm taking crazy pills, reading some of these comments.

It looks like a pretty clear divide between the people that wanted to ask questions to get solutions for their own specific problems; and those who were aware of what the site wanted to be and how it actually operated, and were willing to put in the time and answer questions, etc.

The sheer amount of garbage that used to get posted every day required some pretty heavy moderation. Most of it was not by actual moderators, it was by high-reputation users.

(I have 25K reputation on StackOverflow, and was most active between 2011 and 2018.)





I think 95% of comments earnestly using the word "toxic" can be disregarded.

They were unaware of or unwilling to follow the rules of the site. They mistook SO for reddit, a place for socializing.


Garbage was never moderated on StackOverflow, it was always ignored.

Moderation was used by the insiders to keep new people out.


And half the garbage is from people "moderating"! You are literally rewarded points for doing moderating activities, so of course every post is flooded with BS edits, votes to close, etc.. Cobra effect and whatnot.

What points do you get for moderation activity?

You get points for suggesting edits and badges for completing review activities (votes to close, triage, etc). I thought you got points for the latter as well but looks like that's not the case.

> You get points for suggesting edits ...

Up to 2000 points. When you get to 2000 points, your edits are no longer suggestions and you don't get any additional points for it.

https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/268479/why-dont-you...

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This is a common misperception about moderation on Stack Overflow. You'll often see people claim that people get rep for doing moderation tasks. And some people do pursue badges... though the gold review badge (1000 reviews) has only been awarded 47 times on Stack Overflow ( https://meta.stackoverflow.com/help/badges/81/steward ) ... and silver (250 reviews) 65 times ( https://meta.stackoverflow.com/help/badges/78/reviewer). ... so I would find it difficult to accept that badges are things that motivate people.

If anything, a story of new people doing community moderation could be told in https://meta.stackoverflow.com/help/badges/80/custodian (it has been several months since a person has done a review for the first time).


None, we found the leeches



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