vote up 12 vote down star
2

In what seems to be a blatant violation of Sturgeon's Law, most of the answers on StackOverflow are clear, thoughtful, polite and accurate.

This may be largely due to the self-correcting nature of StackOverflow's voting system, which encourages us to review, comment, and edit each other's answers. So, in general, our combined expertise and desire to inflict share our knowledge forces "good" answers to percolate upward and opens "not-so-good" answers to discussion and correction.

However, I've found that an unsettling number of the answers to technical questions—including "accepted" answers with a large number of upvotes—are simply incorrect. What's more alarming to me is that, despite their technical nature, many of these answers can be checked simply by cutting and pasting them into a command line.

With this in mind, I'm interested to know:

What criteria do you apply before deciding to up-vote an answer?

  • Accuracy: Do you actually check it?
  • The "James Earl Jones" effect: Does it just need to "sound" right?
  • Peer pressure: Everyone else thinks it's good, so it must be right.

What "pushes you over the edge" from liking an answer to actually voting for it?


Meta-question: is there a common term for what I've called the James Earl Jones effect: the tendency to forgo your normal verification process and accept something that sounds right? A quick search returned nothing; however this could arguably be called the Avery Brooks effect, the Obama effect, or the Why I Still Like to Wake up Next to my Spouse effect. :-)

While we're at it. What are the criteria/advantages/reasons for suddenly turning a fresh question into a community wiki? – Deestan Nov 7 '08 at 13:13
Criteria: questions such as this don't deserve the astronomical increase in reputation they would generate. Advantage: poster doesn't appear to be soliciting reputation, fewer downvotes, more answers from experienced users. – Adam Liss Nov 7 '08 at 13:22
If they don't deserve reputation the community wouldn't vote them up. – Bill the Lizard Nov 7 '08 at 13:29
@Bill The Lizard, to the contrary: stackoverflow.com/questions/262657/… stackoverflow.com/questions/84556/… And just about any "favorite" question. All gave huge increases in rep and no substance for programming whatever. – Onorio Catenacci Nov 7 '08 at 13:35
@Adam: Makes sense. Thanks for the answer. – Deestan Nov 7 '08 at 13:44
show 1 more comment

migrated to meta.stackoverflow.com by Bill the Lizard Aug 24 at 17:54

Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.