I'm a SO newbie with no rep points who just got his 1st question answered. I tried to upvote the answer, but get a popup that says I don't have enough rep points yet.

I can understand the basic principle - give people incentives to "give back" to the community, so I have no problem with restricted privileges at first.

But...IT'S MY QUESTION! Who's in a better position to judge if it's a good answer or not?

(Note: One of the answers to the Meta Stack Overflow question "Why don’t people upvote questions they answer" implies I should have been able to upvote in this instance, but I can't. Change in policy? Bug in the code?)

share|improve this question
10  
I think the limitation is in place to curb abuse - it would be easy to "ask" a question on a dummy account and accept and upvote the "answer" that your real account provides. Instant +25 rep. – Kyle Cronin Jul 2 '09 at 0:45
20  
I'll be honest, I typically avoid answering question from people with 1 rep because usually they come from google or some other source looking for a quick answer. Once it's provided they leave and don't check back even though a correct answer has been provided. (Out of personal experience) – Ian Elliott Jul 2 '09 at 0:51
fyi- this is the post that is mentioned here: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/509/… – Kip Jul 2 '09 at 2:10
Do-gooder sub-15 rep accounts that want to upvote the accepted answer on their questions are really only out to take away Purple Hearts and Unsung Heroes (meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/3294) – random Aug 1 '09 at 12:07
12  
@Ian - just... wow. It seems like you're cutting yourself off from the biggest source of questions (many excellent). – Marc Gravell Oct 11 '09 at 7:17
@Kyle: interesting point. I've responded to it in my answer. – Andrew Grimm Jan 13 '11 at 23:02

6 Answers

up vote 38 down vote accepted

As a rep-less newbie, you've not yet earned the site's trust. Fortunately, it's not hard: ask a good question or post a good answer, and you'll quickly have that ability - all it takes is two up-votes!

As the author of a question, the site does grant you one special ability: you can mark an answer as "accepted", proclaiming to the world that it helped you solve your problem. IMHO, this is actually quite a bit more helpful than merely being able to up-vote: once a question has an Accepted answer, passing readers are able to read that answer knowing that it actually worked, and thereby better understand your problem. Not to mention the little bit of satisfaction it can give to the kind author of that answer...

So be patient, new user! You'll be able to up-vote soon enough. Until then, exercise the abilities that you do have to their full extent!

share|improve this answer
Good tip - thanks. I'll do that soon, but I'm going to leave it "unanswered" for a little longer, in hopes of getting some more suggestions. I did thank the 1st responder with a comment, however. – Tom Bushell Jul 2 '09 at 2:40
5  
well, three +5 upvotes now (on a question), but who's counting – Jeff Atwood Mar 22 '11 at 4:14
I asked this almost 2 years ago - don't know why it's suddenly getting attention again. Big influx of SO newbies, perhaps? – Tom Bushell Mar 28 '11 at 15:30
2  
@Tom: lots of new sites == lots of low-rep users. – Shog9 Mar 28 '11 at 15:44

We've already changed it so a newbie can comment on their own question, which is a good change. This seems like a natural extension.

It's one reason why when I see a newbie ask any kind of real question I'll pretty much always upvote it to get them to the point where they can vote.

share|improve this answer
15  
exactly, nothing gives me more pleasure (well, metaphorically speaking) than upvoting a new user's good question to give them their first rep boost. – Jeff Atwood Jul 2 '09 at 2:11
7  
also, the first hit is free. – Jeff Atwood Jul 2 '09 at 2:12
Ah, the drug dealer business model - an oldie, but a goodie. ;-) Not a bad analogy - there's something strangely addictive about all this rep and badge silliness. Don't know why I care, but I do. Jeff, nothing would give ME more (metaphorical) pleasure than to give you the pleasure of upvoting my "good" question: stackoverflow.com/questions/1066675/… (such an obvious rep whoring ploy has gotta work, right?) BTW, I really enjoy Coding Horror (Plan B - suck up) Seriously, thanks for the comments. – Tom Bushell Jul 2 '09 at 2:36
Indeed, the ability to comment own questions is paramount to be able to communicate. As a newbie myself (I've been reading SO for a long time, but started asking/answering only three months ago), I remember it was a little frustrating the lack of abilities, but being able to discuss the answer was almost enough to feel OK again :) – Aleadam Mar 25 '11 at 4:33

I can understand low-privilege users being unable to upvote in general - to avoid sock puppets upvoting the puppet master.

But an exception should be made to their own questions. The reason is that this kind of cheating would be much more obvious - in order to do it, the sock puppet actually has to ask a question, which can be seen by lots of people, whereas ordinary upvoting is anonymous.

share|improve this answer

I tried to upvote the answer, but get a popup that says I don't have enough rep points yet...

I find it curious that new users are presented with the grey up/down triangles for voting. We don't present UI elements for anything else that is outside the user's current capability.

share|improve this answer
1  
You get to use them pretty soon. Getting 15 points to allow you to start upvoting isn't that hard. It basically spurs you to get those points so you can use the grey triangles :) – alex Oct 11 '09 at 6:34
@alex: I still find it a strange inconsistency though. But you're right, it's good encouragement :) – Ether Oct 11 '09 at 6:36
1  
After you've been on the site for a little while you get to know there are a lot of features that you don't have access to yet, but you usually know what the rep limit is to get them. When you've just arrived on the site, you really have no idea what the platform does, so having the up/down buttons is a great incentive. – alex Oct 11 '09 at 6:51
1  
why would you hide an element that is almost literally the core of the site, that you want to educate every user about? That makes no sense. – Jeff Atwood Mar 27 '11 at 10:06
@Jeff - you know the answer: 95% of everybody, including programmers with 145 IQ, who has not studied GUI design extensively, is blamelessly clueless about the matter! – FastAl Aug 19 '11 at 15:00

You can't up-vote, but you can accept (check box). That gives the person who answered your question more quatloos (vague Star Trek reference, I mean rep points) than an up-vote (15 vs. 10). That's good enough for a start. The community does not yet trust you enough to discern "good enough for government work" from "gone the extra mile." :-)

share|improve this answer
3  
it also gives you, the acceptor, +2 rep – Jeff Atwood Mar 25 '11 at 2:42

I was in the same predicament not too long ago.. But really, I got enough rep points to achieve this the same night I posted my first question.

Aside from that, it's just the site's rules; and I bet the makers of this site had to deal with this question themselves, and then decided on the 15rep rule.

So once you get enough rep, upvote the answer you wanted to before, it's that simple :)

share|improve this answer

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged