One of the reasons I've heard for not wanting to delete old posts that are really not up to today's standards is that the reputation will be lost.
An example (and I'm not trying to pick on a moderator there - just clear up a misunderstanding about reputation and deleted posts)
[...] I'm not going to remove someone's reputation or their answer just because there's duplicate information out there -- that's not for me to do (and it's a silly thing to waste moderator time on, since we don't scale). If it really upsets you, get together 20 of your closest Stack Overflowers and have at it. Just don't ask a moderator to do it because it's very low on our list of priorities. We've got too much to worry about without worrying about duplication in the 'verse
The classic example of this would be an old post (from 2012 or so) has a score of +15 (or so), but is a duplicate answer of a post from before. It should be deleted - duplicate answers serve to confuse readers both to our standards now for posting an answer and also for readers trying to find the answer. Alternatively, this is an old commentary post from before comments. Either way - old post, high score, should be deleted by today's standards.
So, what happens when a mod deletes a +15 score post?
- the post is deleted.
That's it. No reputation loss. Nothing else untold. It's just gone.
Yes, that is correct, there is no reputation lost for that post being deleted. This is described in Reputation and Historical Archives
First, if you’ve contributed something worthwhile to the site, you should keep the reputation for that even if it eventually gets deleted. “Worthwhile” here is defined as,
- A score of 3 or greater
- Visible on the site for at least 60 days
But, as we know, 20k users can't delete answers that have a positive score. They have to push it negative.
Now, let's say that that flag is declined for some reason or another. As I mentioned earlier this is sometimes from a misplaced "I don't want to remove reputation gained for old posts", and instead a concerted effort to down vote the post to negative is called out (example - the post has gone from to +11/-4 to +11/-11 in two days) and 20k users can then act on deleting it.
When the post is now deleted, the reputation is lost. By not deleting the post when it was at +7, the user will lose 102 reputation when it is deleted.
So, by not deleting the historical poor answer (that should be deleted - though this is open to interpretation) and instead forcing the community to do this make user lose all the reputation gained on the post.
This point is one that there is much gnashing of teeth and ado on meta.
And so, mods, if the post should be deleted or would likely be deleted when the concentrated focus of users gaze upon it - and you find out about this via a flag... if you want to preserve the reputation of the user, please consider deleting the post sooner rather than later.
Deleting sooner will likely create a better experience for authors, moderators and flaggers:
- You handled the flag and don't get another "why was my NAA declined?" on meta.
- You don't get a "why did everyone down vote me? I lost 100 reputation" post on meta.
And if you got here, I'm sorry for having you read another "mods should delete things" post that you may or may not agree with. I just felt that it is important for people to realize that not deleting old posts that should be and are up voted means that more reputation will be lost when they are deleted.
If you want to preserve the user's reputation, delete post before its score gets < 3.