I have seen this question before, but it seems to be talking about the daily cap.

The idea came to me when I saw this profile. This is one guy who has only 1 answer (and 1 score 3 question) and 2k reputation. The reason being the fact that he has answered a question viewed by many people.

I believe this example shows there is something wrong with the scoring system. After all, by this single one-paragraph answer you cannot tell the person is an expert or has rights to edit questions and answers.

My question is to limit the amount of reputation one can get from any of his answers and perhaps also questions. This is not a daily cap, but a forever cap. I'd say 200 for the answers and 100 for questions should be good, which correspond to 20 votes each. I believe an answer that gets 20 up-votes is a good answer and any number above that is just a matter of how often people have that question, not how great the answer is.

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He can already edit stuff. – Bryan Dunsmore May 9 '12 at 23:44
@dunsmoreb, which he shouldn't. Answering 1 question shouldn't give you such a high privilege. – Shahbaz May 9 '12 at 23:45
I completely agree. A single answer doesn't really "qualify" you as knowing what you're doing. – animuson May 9 '12 at 23:45
I agree totally dude... – Bryan Dunsmore May 9 '12 at 23:46
I like, but maybe more than 20. 25? 50? We'd have to do some Data Exploring to get a good feel for what's an average regular good score and what is due to high view-count. – Double AA May 9 '12 at 23:47
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I am, however, against anything that breaks something for everyone because of a tiny number of people. – Andrew Barber May 9 '12 at 23:47
what if that answer had been a bad one? – Andrew Barber May 9 '12 at 23:48
@AndrewBarber, what do you mean? How are bad answers affect this? – Shahbaz May 9 '12 at 23:50
Also, almost all high rep guys also have a couple of such answers (although some of them have been turned into community wiki). – Shahbaz May 9 '12 at 23:50
I do believe Jon Skeet himself said he would support this, although I'm too lazy to go look for that right now. – animuson May 9 '12 at 23:51
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If that answer had been a bad one, you might not be here posting this, as he would have lots of negative votes, or have deleted the answer. Popular questions cut both ways. – Andrew Barber May 9 '12 at 23:52
@AndrewBarber: That's a very different scenario. If it were that bad that he accrued lots of negative reputation, it probably would have gotten deleted, and he would gain it all back. – animuson May 9 '12 at 23:53
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My point is, this was a fluke that could have gone either way (positive or zero), and the quality still counts for something. – Andrew Barber May 9 '12 at 23:55
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I hate to say it, but this question seems like sour grapes. Ok, that user was incredibly lucky on their one answer. Sometimes you win the lottery on the first ticket you buy. But still, it was a good answer that has helped lots of people. Most of the people this change would effect have bought lots of tickets with only a few upvotes. Should we take away their biggest winnings because someone might get lucky without paying their dues? – Jon Ericson May 9 '12 at 23:57
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@JonEricson I don't think these ridiculous numbers are a problem when isolated. The problem is that they mess up with other stats. This answer, which Google/Wikipedia could have given, sends its answerer in 1st position on the top users lists of all the tags of that question. – Bruno May 10 '12 at 0:01
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1 Answer

I agree with your sentiments about gaining editing privileges after only answering one question, but I disagree completely with your proposed way of fixing it.

First of all, is this really a problem? Are there users with edit privileges gained from one or two questions/answers running around editing stuff and doing a bad job of it? Are we looking to fix a problem that doesn't exist?

If someone lays down a great question or answer that continues to accrue votes, then good on them - they should not be penalized for that. We want great questions and answers, and moving to a form of communism whereby we stop awarding rep to a user because they already have enough feels totally wrong to me. Additionally, we shouldn't be in a position of asking "How much rep is too much?".

The edit privilege was set at a certain rep point to give people incentive and reward for attaining reputation. If this is a problem then possibly the best way to handle this is to require:

  • a certain number of approved edit suggestions

    OR

  • a certain minimum number of answers and/or questions, possibly even a certain ratio of questions/answers

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There is a general issue, though, about some of these scores. There are general inequalities between tags and specificity of questions. Sometimes, the more expertise is required to write a question, the less likely it is to be highly upvoted. I think these lottery questions (often based on low-hanging fruits) will ultimately drive more expert users away. – Bruno May 10 '12 at 0:08
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@Bruno: I'd argue (as someone who knows sed better than c#) that you are never going to solve the problem of the vagarities of the universe rewarding the lucky over the deserving once in a while. In the big picture, throwing out the advantages of luck will hurt the persistent more than the lucky, believe it or not. – Jon Ericson May 10 '12 at 0:23
I don't really care how the problem is solved (as long as it is). My problem is not with the number that represents your reputation, but with other stuff that come with it. The privileges are an example. The same user I mentioned is considered one of the top 9% users of this quarter even though he has done nothing. See what I mean? The side effects are many. – Shahbaz May 10 '12 at 10:18

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