Tencent Cloud Developer Community Creation Experience

Rejected

This issue experiences the Tencent Cloud Developer Community

First Article Rejected

This article was first published on ChatGPT VPN Detection Bypass Methods, with some people participating in the discussion and sharing their usage methods.
ChatGPT’s user experience is indeed excellent; even the free version surpasses many other AI services that claim to exceed it, so I am unwilling to give up using it directly due to network issues. Instead, I have gone to great lengths to research usage methods. This persistence is based on a developer’s desire to improve their work experience and increase work efficiency.

For domestic developers, most network issues stem from the firewall. Special software naturally cannot be shared due to national conditions, and it was unexpected that even sharing rules is not allowed.
In any case, this first article was just a test to confirm the boundaries of network issues that can be discussed in the community. Now it can be seen that even edging is not allowed.

I fully understand that large platforms cherish their reputation. Platforms like Tencent, NetEase, and Toutiao require noticeable review time for modifications to my profile nickname, description, etc.
Considering past history where platforms have been banned from providing services due to lax reviews allowing sensitive information to be posted, it’s understandable for large platforms to do this—after all, they can’t let a rat turd like me spoil the whole pot of porridge.

So, what can be posted in this developer community?

From my extremely limited browsing, it includes the following categories:

  1. Experience-based
    1. Study notes
    2. Development features
    3. Problem troubleshooting
    4. Library details
  2. Tutorial-based
    1. Tool tutorials
    2. Programming languages
    3. Architecture overviews
    4. Code details
  3. Others

The quality of these articles varies. The main issue is that there are too many secondary creations masquerading as originals.
What is the best documentation for languages and frameworks? Naturally, the official documentation. Why skip the official docs to read these secondary creations expressing personal understanding?
Most experience-sharing posts cannot be replicated; some even involve individual business details. To share them, they need to be abstracted a bit and summarized into generalizable experiences; otherwise, it’s basically treating me as part of their bug-play loop. This is essentially another resource-scarce version of CSDN.

To address low-quality content, they should not hesitate to reduce short-term creator numbers, content volume, and reader numbers in the short term. Add a “downvote” feature and reduce student study notes. Creating a large amount of non-replicable experiences is meaningless.

Currently, the best developer communities are Stack Overflow and GitHub. If there are other high-quality developer communities, please comment and share.