I am interested in the "official" community opinion on this and would be grateful for an open minded answer:
Obvious enough community is at the very centre of the Stack Overflow ecosystem. It is "powered" and self-governed by reputation of its members. In a most typical social manner people get rewarded or punished (depending on the level of their contribution) in form of reputation points.
Reputation indicates how much the system trust you
So it does seems to be important in that sense, but why? Probably I never really paid that much attention to this or put to much thought into it. Normally I am just looking up the profile of the person if I like a particular question/answer, etc.
There is no special colour coding or something for questions and answers like I am asking in current question or like Jon Skeet Facts (which is kind of funny and so on, and probably has its own designated place at Stack Overflow). But it is not really equivalent to technical problems which I might be particular interested in. So in that sense, what would be exactly that it is measured by reputation? Is user reputation is just a measure of user's activity?
I would not say that reputation measures the level of my trust to the user. I still have to read some of his answers to get an impression.
Is best practice to filter/search relying on reputation?
I am not always sure where or how to rely on reputation with out doing a review of reputation history of particular user. (So far I was convinced by the tools provided and constantly improved by Stack Overflow that there is a lot of attention paid to exposing/giving best overview how the reputation was formed).
Reading Stack Overflow is hardly comparable with a news paper - it is a completely different way of consuming information. There is no standard best practice on how to do it (I can image many Stack Overflow users having their own way). Anyway I am sure there might be ways how to work with Stack Overflow much more efficiently than I do. For example, although it is possible to filter in /search by user's reputation, I could probably use it more often.
Does Wikipedia model apply to Stack Overflow reputation (in any way)?
As you may know, Wikipedia also strongly relies on crowd sourced contribution and at the same time provides a completely different format of presenting knowledge, much more abstracted, objective and detached from personification of its community. Contrary to Stack Overflow, Wikipedia has a different "non-voting" reputation system (AFAIK mostly a number of edits). So, my question is could it be that Stack Overflow is too over-fixated on the reputation concept? There is work going on how to address such or similar "design" drawbacks in the future or constantly improve/to bring in-balance existing design.
PS
I guess I would be happy with a short.. "Reputation?..Hell, yes! It is all since everything on Stack Overflow coupled and runs on it". But I would also rather try to take a bigger picture for an answer here: e.g. when more theoretical question like whether or not reputation is infinite are asked thought over.
Please share your understanding of this matter.
A simple fact is that reputation is important not only for users but also for question/answer (Q/A) pairs.
How do I benefit from it as user? I already have Google Search that can look for some highly rated Q/A or Stack Overflow search that sorts Q/A accordingly. How do I sort by combining both Q/A and user rating, that is, sort by question.rating, answer.rating, user.rating? Because than I would get best rating answers by most rated users (if I want to). In which form it is already done/possible?
I understand that I can do
votes:10 views:20
What else?
It is not really equivalent to following/subscribing to syndication of activity for particular user or tag.
TODO
The part about Wikipedia should be probably paraphrased or removed or moved into a separate question. Everyone is welcome to do so.
