speculative posts are one of the symptoms. Others include:
- high degree of repetitiveness of questions/answers/opinions
- over-prioritizing on making everyone feel welcome while de-emphasizing expectations of prior effort by music making and/or forum newbies
- endless threads that go on for years, making search for pre-existing answers difficult/impossible
- posting without reading prior posts in threads
- too much side tracking of original thread topics
- much repetition of "my DAW is the best" in threads about other DAWs
- much repetition of "you should really be using my preferred operating system" in threads about another operating system
- too many posts like:
- "OMG - this library/reverb/soft-synth is soooo amazing - I must immediately buy it".
- "I bought it, yay me!"
- and just generally too much fluff posting
All of those things resulting in it being difficult to find the signal of advanced knowledge or most relevant news or uniquely interesting opinion in an ever increasing avalanche of (albeit often charming) noise. Lo-fi is nice, but if it's so lo-fi that you can hardly hear the notes, it becomes more of a noise machine that assists sleeping, rather than a music station:
Just to add to that list (while we're here), another posting behaviour that has increased with and contributed to the noise, is when members take it upon themselves to "announce" something before the developer or the company gets the chance.
Posts that link a video but say nothing of it. Posts that contain a screenshot of an Instagram story but say nothing about it.
New threads created that copy paste the contents of a marketing email the OP just received - usually within 15 seconds of having received the email - yet saying nothing else about it.
And these days, when the marketing-savvy businesses are releasing weekly videos, regular social posts, and frequent newsletters, boy does that noise add up.
The beauty of newsletters and YouTube, is that you get to
choose to be subscribed to that stuff. We're not really afforded that same luxury here.
Then there's another post type - which shares some similarities to the previous one - which I think of as the "Let me google that for you" posts:
Answers to questions simply based on things they've read or googled, often resulting in unhelpful, vague, and at times misleading responses that resemble a search engine result.
Q: "Looking for a good plugin that does this..."
A: "Here is a list of every plugin I could find online that purports to do this"
Q: ".... great"
Part of the pickle with this, is that many of these posts are created with the
intention of being helpful. There might also be a driving factor of "being first", or getting a few likes in some cases, or simply to chat.
But there's always grey area around whether actions should be taken against somebody who is genuinely well-intentioned, especially when there are others who appear to appreciate those posts too.