This idea has been mentioned in various answers and comments related to low-quality questions. I was prompted to make this post after an off-hand comment of mine received 22 votes.
We have a serious problem with low-quality questions on StackOverflow. Even I, who once prided myself as a "nice-guy", have been running out of flags lately.
This growth of low-quality answers is the Kudzu keeping people from finding good questions, discouraging good answers to those good questions, and running off good users. It's turning those who remain more hostile and hair-triggered than they ought to be. It is, to put it briefly, killing the site.
Downvoting does not discourage users who do not care about reputation or even having their account question-banned. It is far too easy to abusively make new accounts, and I doubt there is much that can be done to prevent that without affecting legitimate users.
Closing questions does not work, because 'gimmie codez' still manage to get their codez in most cases. They might not get what they wanted, but they get more than they probably ought to, if they put absolutely no effort into their question in the first place, and enough to make them want to come back for more.
What we need is a different approach. The solution to help vampirism does not seem to be going after the vampires themselves or their questions; we've done that, it doesn't work. They have nothing to lose.
What we should consider is depriving them of what they want: answers for their off-topic and low-quality questions. To that end I ask:
Should we revert reputation gained from answers when the questioned they are posted on is closed?
It makes little sense to reward users for answering bad questions. Such answers are likely off-topic, too broad, duplicates, or outright copied, just like the questions they respond to. It is hard to write good, generally helpful answers to awful questions. All encouraging it does is send a message that we do answer bad questions, which encourages them to be asked.
To an extent, this already happens. I merely propose it be made systematic. To quote Servy:
As far as help vampires deleting their bad questions as soon as they get an answer; that's why you don't answer bad questions.
By taking away reputation from answers to bad questions, we would also encourage users who do want to write good answers to gray area questions to ask for clarification and edits first. That would do something, whatever small, to mitigate the Fastest Gun in the West phenomena.
Potential problems:
- It would discourage users from close-voting questions they have answered.
- It may be open to abuse. For example, close-voting questions where a specific user has a + answer. Detection metrics might need to be added, as it could potentially be abused to effectively serial-downvote.
- It might intensify close-vote wars, since more people would have something to lose from a question being closed.
- It could seriously affect people whose reputation was gained from highly up-voted answers on old, now closed, questions. Perhaps such answers could be grandfathered-in. I am not sure if historically-closed questions would necessarily be hit in the first place. It is worth noting many canonical questions already are community-wiki'd.
Potential benefits:
- It would reduce low-quality question spam.
- It would reduce the number of low-quality and especially dupliciate answers.
- It may encourage more users to request question improvements before answering.