There was a recent question Should SE switch focus on improving curation instead of creating new questions? which proposes one way of adapting to the massive drop in questions at Stack Overflow (like many major sites). But before we consider "do something", I think we better consider "do nothing" (which is usually far easier to implement).
We're presented with a trolley problem: "do nothing" or "do something" (and opting out of making a choice = "do nothing", so we must choose one or the other):
To make a better-informed decision as to whether or not we should pull the metaphorical lever...
Question: With a massive drop in questions, what happens if we maintain the status quo?
I really don't know. My current thoughts are:
Just because a site is small, doesn't mean it's bad. The question drop could just taper off, and we'll reach a new, perfectly acceptable "status quo".
Maybe there's a risk that sites will become "top heavy": lots of experts, but not enough questions for them to answer.
Somehow Stack Exchange will need to "pay the bills"; the ultra-responsive site we've come to expect at Stack Exchange comes at a price. But that needs views (right?). (Do we need to cut costs?)
We need to simultaneously satisfy:
- Random people on the Internet (views, new users, questions, etc.);
- Contributors (questions, answers, curation, moderation, etc.);
- The company (server costs, maintainence, marketing, etc.).
If we "do nothing" will all three be satisfied?
Stack Exchange is selling our work to AI mega-corporations. Is that alone enough to "pay the bills"? Is this long-term acceptable to users? Will revenue drop as questions drop?
With current trends, will Math.SE (or some other site) overtake Stack Overflow and thereby become the new Stack Exchange flagship site?
Is "do something" even an option? E.g., if the Internet has indeed changed on a fundamental level, and if people have far-reduced interest in learning programming (and other topics) through a Stack-Overflow-like Q&A interface, then "do nothing" and "do something" might be the same choice anyway.


