I'm not the downvoter either, but it maybe the topic of the badges: they're not something really fresh. Badges are really a mechanism to get people to do the things that are good for the community.
It's like putting iodine in the salt. People want salt on their food - they don't want to take iodine tablets. But the gov't decided we needed iodine to prevent rickets goiter. So, they put it in the salt. Well, StackExchange puts good behavior hidden in badges.
The basic "participation badges" are already there. Future badges should be for other behaviors that we simply need addressed. Here's some examples:
To get people to vote on questions, there's vox populi and electorate. Electorate is there as a high reaching goal to keep people focused on questions. Vox Populi is only attainable if you put some of your votes into questions instead of just answers. This directly addresses the issue of "we don't get enough votes on questions."
To get people to use the share buttons, the publicist badge and friends. This directly addresses the feature of sharing/advertising posts.
People love badges. Hands down, we love badges. Why? I don't know - probably the same reason I spend hours gathering feathers on a computer game so I can get one more pet that I'll never use, since it puts me one closer to 100 pets. Which gives me what? Another pet I'll never use! Oh, and an achievement. That's why I'm doing it, for an achievement.
Now, the people that frequent StackOverflow for sure, and many others, are the type that will do that 50 hour feather grind for that one pet. The powers-that-be at SO know this, and use it to their advantage. After all, when SO came out, achievements were all the rage.
Online games use achievements to keep people playing (and thereby also keep them paying.) StackOverflow, while profitable, also has a bigger purpose: to have a free, easily accessible, reliable place where technical (and with stack exchange, all kinds!) of questions can be answered by professional and experienced people. In order to keep the community in the state that best provides those answers, we all need to abide by a certain behavior code. By making the badges directly related to problems/issues on the side, there's an incentive to make people fall more in line with that certain code. And they get a badge while they're at it.
Personally, I think it's an excellent (and fair) use of social engineering. And the bottom line is they simply don't need more participation. The behaviors that would be encouraged by your badges aren't the kind of behaviors that need attention. It's not that they're necessarily bad behaviors, they're simply not serious issues for the sites.