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Lower the amount of reputation needed to comment
Lower commenting threshold to 1 rep

I think all of us have seen this situation many many times:

"I don't yet have enough reputation to comment, so I am writing this as an answer..."

I see this, or something similar very often, and it usually has to be cleaned up by a moderator or leads to undeserved upvotes since many people think to themselves "he/she should at least be able to comment."

I don't necessarily think that the privilege to comment should be given immediately. Here is my suggestion:

All new accounts should be given the ability to comment a finite number of times before they reach 50 reputation, say 3. This should help reduce the occurrence of the above situation, while preserving the fact that commenting extensively is a community privilege. (Specifically so unknowns don't spam) When they comment before 50 reputation, a box should come up warning them that they only have x-number of comments remaining before getting 50 reputation. Since everyone can comment at least a few times, this should reduce pity upvotes.

I would like to hear others thoughts,

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"Answers" of the form "I don't yet have enough reputation to comment, so I am writing this as an answer..." really should be cleaned up. If you'd like to help out, here is one place to start. – Chris Frederick Oct 13 '11 at 20:27
I did read it, @Eric. And you are suggesting that the threshold should be lower, but only for the first three comments. Since we have an effectively unlimited supply of new users, that amounts to the same thing... Regardless, the argument against isn't really, "new users will comment too much" - it's "they'll use comments for things we don't want them to". – Shog9 Oct 14 '11 at 14:48
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closed as exact duplicate by Simon Brown, Gamecat, Shog9 Oct 13 '11 at 19:48

This question covers exactly the same ground as earlier questions on this topic; its answers may be merged with another identical question. See the FAQ for guidance on how to improve it.

4 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

50 rep is not that hard to obtain. You could do it in five minutes with a single answer, or maybe a day with a few answers. The restriction isn't just to prevent abuse of comments, it's there to make sure new users are sufficiently indoctrinated to how the engine works in order to properly use the new features that are unlocked for them. At least that's the theory, it doesn't always work, but it does most of the time.

The potential for abuse here is just massive, since we don't require registration. My chief concern is that it would add an undue overhead to moderators, and potentially annoy the community with lots of cheap Nike shoes and Rolex watches.

I see your point, and I see quite a few well articulated 'answers' that are actually requests for clarification. But, those well articulated 'comments' are much more rare than the noise that packs our queue day in and day out.

Great suggestion, but I don't think it would work out very well.

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I like everything, except I don't understand the potential for abuse? Couldn't people be doing that already with answers? – Eric Naslund Oct 13 '11 at 16:42
I was going to link to half a dozen answers for very basic questions (recent) in this answer that got lots of votes, but I don't want to alert the too much rep police and deal with the subsequent flags to investigate voting patterns. – Tim Post Oct 13 '11 at 16:42
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@EricNaslund To a degree. Comments on many posts get hidden by default, and could go undetected for a period of time. Additionally, it's much easier for us to look at actual posts when identifying a spam bot, rather than searching or digging through history. Finally, afaik, comments don't trigger an automatic ban if enough of them are flagged into oblivion. Perhaps they should. – Tim Post Oct 13 '11 at 16:46
@EricNaslund: But answers (and questions) are easier to notice, track and handle. If a spam post is made as a question or answer, the question itself is bumped to the front page due to the activity giving an opportunity for people to see it. If it is indeed spam or just doesn't belong, it could be flagged, closed, deleted, edited, what have you. If it is a comment, just about all the benefits I had just mentioned are nullified. The community can only flag the comment but otherwise a moderator would have to come in and clean it up. – Jeff Mercado Oct 13 '11 at 20:45
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What's to stop them from registering another account to post X more comments? Do we really want them to start spamming in the comments?

All it takes to get to 50 rep is 5 upvotes on your answers. I think it is very fair to expect newbies to quietly earn rep and prove themselves before gaining the privilege to comment everywhere.

When you're recruited as the junior most member in an already established team with their own practices and several senior members, you don't start your first day by dishing out your opinions and comments. You stay low, work quietly, prove yourself and then you voice up. Until then, your opinions will be regarded as noise, even if they aren't. The same applies here.

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Nothing, but I find spamming answers is worse. – Eric Naslund Oct 13 '11 at 16:31
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abuse of answers like that is so easy to spot and flag to correct the behaviour compared to spotting and correcting abuse of comments – awoodland Oct 13 '11 at 16:34
@awoodland: good point. – Eric Naslund Oct 13 '11 at 16:35
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I agree with your sentiments, but:

  1. Usually right after "I can't comment but..." there follows another question, not a reasonable comment. Spotting that is harder than spotting inappropriate answers
  2. From what I've seen these usually get downvoted, not upvoted
  3. Restricted comment volumes will probably be harder to understand for new users than no comments

I think there are possibly some things that could be used as a quality metric to avoid these non-answers (e.g. this) from being posted, e.g.:

  • "Thanks in advance" never makes sense in an answer
  • "Plz help" likewise
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People comment too much as it is. Lowering the bar for commenting probably isn't a good idea. And seriously 50 is pretty easy to get. Even without posting you can get to 50 from 25 suggested edit approvals.

Also the concern for pity votes probably isn't that big a deal since once the mod deletes the post the score gets removed.

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+1, good point about the post deletion. Although, of all the ways to get 50 reputation I think 25 suggested edits requires by far the largest amount of effort. (compared to one solid answer) – Eric Naslund Oct 13 '11 at 16:37
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That's like saying it takes less effort to win a boxing match by KO then by decision. That's only true if you can hit really hard. Similarly writing even a +5 answer is easy if you know a lot. If you don't than editing 25 posts is eaiser. Incidentally the easiest way to get rep is to ask a lot of questions see blankman 12K rep with only ~8 points from answers – Some Helpful Commenter Oct 13 '11 at 17:28
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