11:37
@AndrewLeach Well, protection is the only course of action which can be argued to be prejudiced because it is a course of action taken directly against a post sight unseen (closure also prevents answers, but it is an action taken against the question). Supposing every positive contribution a person could possibly make is to a protected question, then it might bar them from making any of those contributions, on questions that are otherwise considered worthy of being open.
The other thing that needs to be considered is that for the sake of an effective comparative peer review, we are supposed to have some bad answers published on Stack Exchange websites), because otherwise we are only receiving half of the information regarding the subject matter that we otherwise could.
2 hours later…
13:58
@AndrewLeach The supposition does seem rather unlikely, but not impossible. Indeed, I could imagine a situation where somebody has specialized knowledge pertaining to a category of questions. Perhaps a concrete example or two may be in order:
Aside from a lucky accident (I read such and such article recently, and it just so happened to address this), maybe somebody has years of experience in the military and became accustomed to the slang, and much of that is offensive in nature. I know that Paul Beale was one such man, and such a major contributor to the Partridge Dictionary of Slang that…
Aside from a lucky accident (I read such and such article recently, and it just so happened to address this), maybe somebody has years of experience in the military and became accustomed to the slang, and much of that is offensive in nature. I know that Paul Beale was one such man, and such a major contributor to the Partridge Dictionary of Slang that…
7 hours later…
21:23
@MetaEd Just coming to this now. Only responding to your first set of messages where you pinged me, because haven't had time to read full backlog since then.
That feels to me to be a focus on policing the types of questions which can be asked, rather than premptive moderation of questions which cause undue messes.
I think the costs of leaving most of these questions open and unprotected are so low as to be negligible. And the few that do cause problems are so immediately remedied as to be free.
I suggest when we see a question has actually attracted a set of bad answers, or hit the HNQ and caused a mess, then we take action.
In fact, we know this to be the intended design of question protection, because as a non-mod I can't even protect questions until after they've attracted a low-rep answer or two. That is, after the problem has actually occurred.
In all, I worry about (a) actual censorship and raising barriers to new users and (b) when there's no actual censorship, then even the perception of censorship.
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Continuation of discussion from comment thread here: english.m...