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Given that Quora's content is collaboratively organized and in some cases edited, it seems obvious that Quora is not a service for content where the author wants his or her individual voice to be heard.
Answers are NOT collaboratively edited. It's a hybrid approach - Questions are communal; Answers are personal but voted and commented; Answer Wikis (infrequently used) are communal.

Also, Quora provides "Posts", which are not associated with Questions. They are much-more blog-like (and the main criticism of Scoble's answer was that it should have been a a post).

So he's mad he can't be The Star?
He's mad because his comment was hidden through the collaborative organization process.
Quora's team is either disingenuous or lost themselves. Many of their own people are using Quora as a Twitter - sharing thoughts, chit chats, in a form of questions. How viable is that to sustain a service? If they wanted to create a social-networking site to begin with, than why bother with the QA format?