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what's the justification for the commenting reputation requirement?

Why do you need 50 reputation points to be able to comment on an answer, when you don't need any at all to post an answer yourself? Seems the only way to ask an answerer for some clarification is to "break the rules" and post it as an answer yourself, until you get enough reputation points. What's the logic in this requirement?

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marked as duplicate by Toon Krijthe, jmort253, kiamlaluno, John, random Jul 10 '12 at 21:26

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2 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

Why do you need 50 reputation points to be able to comment on an answer, when you don't need any at all to post an answer yourself?

Without the reputation requirement, people could create accounts just to leave spammy comments over the entire site. If they post a spam answer, the question gets bumped to the front page and the community will delete the answer in a matter of minutes. If they post a spam comment, the question doesn't get bumped and the comment might survive for weeks, months or even years.

This would eventually poison the entire site. I agree that it is an annoyance, but it's better than having to go through dozens of spam comments before finding anything useful.

Even worse: Comments aren't rate-limited by any kind of CAPTCHAs!

Somebody in control of a botnet could flood SO with literally millions of comments, making the entire comment system unusable.

Earning 50 rep – for anybody who has real intentions to use the site – should be pretty easy:

  • An upvote on one of your answers adds 10 points to your reputation.

  • Getting an answer accepted adds 15 points to your reputation.

  • An upvote on one of your questions adds 5 points to your reputation.

  • Accepting an answer adds 2 points to your reputation.

  • Getting a suggested edit on a foreign post approved adds 2 points to your reputation.

  • Once you earn 200 rep on any site, you will receve a 100 bonus for all associated accounts.

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So maybe comments should have captchas if user posts too many in short period of time. I still don't see how not having such requirement for answers is different. – user975135 Jun 24 '12 at 18:24
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Because commenting on foreign question isn't a necessity to become active on the site. Answering is. The rules for question bumping also make a huge difference. – Dennis Jun 24 '12 at 18:26
Well then maybe we should consider that people getting annoyed by small things like this won't want to become active on this site because of it. And can you explain me how comments not bumping a question has anything to do with this? Also the only "very easy" ways to get points is to accept an answer, which will cost you 25 questions. – user975135 Jun 24 '12 at 18:29
@user975135 You can also edit poor/low quality questions and answers. Each of these suggested edits that's approved will earn you 2 rep points – Clive Jun 24 '12 at 18:32
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If I post a spam answer, the question gets bumped to the front page and the community will delete the answer in a matter of minutes. If I post a spam comment, the question doesn't get bumped and the comment might survive for weeks, months or even years. This would eventually poison the entire site. I agree that it is an annoyance, but it's better than having to go through dozens of spam comments before finding anything useful. – Dennis Jun 24 '12 at 18:32
OK, that answers it. Still hope we'll come up with another solution, small things like this are annoying for new users and can make them stop using the site. I know it almost made me when I was starting. And I still think 50 is too much, that's 25 questions if you get points by accepting an answer to your questions. – user975135 Jun 24 '12 at 18:37
Only seven if you get one upvote in mean, but the 50 rep limit was set precisely so that it would require some effort to be able to comment. It's unpleasant not to have a voice. If there's a better solution, I'd welcome it. But I can't think of one. – Dennis Jun 24 '12 at 18:46

It avoids getting many "me too" kind of comment, and other non-constructive comments from users who are not familiar with how we do things on the Stack Exchange network.

It is very easy to achieve 50 reputation - 5 upvotes on answers will do it, so it is seen as a minimal obstruction to those who do wish to participate in the community.

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But how is allowing to post an answer different then? Isn't it worse that people post an answer instead of a comment with the same content as in your example? And people quickly upvoting answers they hardly read just to get points is also a negative side-effect. – user975135 Jun 24 '12 at 18:14
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@user975135: Upvoting answers doesn't give you any points. Receiving upvotes on your own answers does. – Dennis Jun 24 '12 at 18:18
@Dennis: Even worse, isn't "very easy" like Oded said then. What about my first point? – user975135 Jun 24 '12 at 18:21
@user975135 - Answers can be downvoted. Comments cannot. If someone posts a "me too" "answer", it will get downvoted and flagged as "not an answer" and get removed from the site pretty quickly. – Oded Jun 24 '12 at 18:22
Then maybe comments should have a flag button as well. You know, why have tall girraffes when you can have short trees? – user975135 Jun 24 '12 at 18:26
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Comments have a flag button. As for the rep: As I said in the latest edit to my answer, once you earn 200 rep on any site, you will receve a 100 bonus for all associated accounts. Your pretty close on SO, so that should take care of your problems. – Dennis Jun 24 '12 at 18:27
I have been using Stackoverflow for months and haven't reached 200 points. That's not a great solution. And if comments can be flagged, I don't see the issue. – user975135 Jun 24 '12 at 18:34
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@user the issue is that you don't see comment activity on the update list. Someone can post absolute spam and have it sit there for a long time before anyone sees it to flag it in the first place – simchona Jun 24 '12 at 20:06

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