NOTE: This is not a duplicate of What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”? I am not asking what to do once an account has been banned. I am asking about the effectiveness of the length of said ban on new accounts.
Around the time that I had about 100 reputation (+/- 10 points), I was officially banned from asking questions.
Rightfully so! Now that I've spent almost a month spending time editing and answering questions in order to get my reputation up, I've learned a great deal about how to more appropriately ask questions. I've also learned a lot about how some of my previous questions could have been improved to avoid the ban in the first place.
Part of me is ashamed now that I understand where I went wrong; another part of me is understanding of the fact that I was a relatively new user (I've had my account for a while but haven't used it as aggressively as I have in the past 2 months) and that one must not only abide by the explicit rules, but the implicit guidelines of the community.
I'm not making a snide remark about the implicitness of guidelines! An analogy would be that it's not against the law to chew with your mouth open, but a child will learn in time that it's not acceptable within a proper society. I believe SO has quite a few rules similar to this to which I'm grateful for and understand with my increased time and experience on the site.
With that said, I respected my ban and have worked a bit hard over the past month to get my reputation up and keep my head down. I've gained about 240 points of reputation, which is where the point of this thread comes in:
The ban will be lifted automatically by the system when it determines that your positive contributions outweigh those questions which were poorly received.
240 reputation is not significant to a user with, say, 4000K rep. But when a relatively new and clearly inexperienced user who was banned at 100 points, is still banned at 340, it's rather discouraging. Heck, I'm even in the top 4% for this month.
It's not that I had to gain 240 rep; it's that I effectively tripled my reputation since my ban (+240%) and am still considered to not have enough positive contributions to ask questions on the site.
Now, I doubt that a user who was banned at 1K has to earn at least 2.4K points. I don't know the algorithm and multiple posts have stated to stop trying; I get that. But my concern is that I highly suspect that many new users who made stupid mistakes, like myself, in the beginning of their accounts' life and tried to earn their privileges back by editing, answering, etc. may find that the easier route, after no results, is to simply make a new account (which is against the rules). Or even worse, stop partaking in the site all together.
It's almost been a month since my ban and I have questions I would really love to ask, but I can't. Every time I get a new accepted edit, upvoted answer, or badge- I immediately check my privileges to be once again disheartened that I haven't earned that privilege back.
My aim of this post is to get some feedback onto whether the community feels that the aggressive ban on relatively new accounts encourages users to attempt to put out more positive contributions or results in new users making multiple accounts. I'm not arguing that banning a new user is justification for them breaking the rules by making an alternative account. I'm arguing that when a relatively new user triples their reputation over less than a month and still has not had their ban lifted, then abiding by the rules and doing the right thing clearly is not being rewarded. Might as well just go make an alternate account and leave the old one in the dust.