Public shame can be a real motivator, though I know that Jeff Atwood prefers rewarding good behavior over punishing bad behavior. I recently answered a question for a person who has only accepted answers on 25% of 160+ questions. Seems to me that's bordering on abusive behavior. How about a wall of shame for people who consistently don't reward people who help them? Say the top ten people who have more than 20 questions and fewer than 50% accepted answers.

I don't really look at the person's stats or wiki status before answering, and don't really want to, but it seems like it would help improve the community if people who use the resource would give a little back to the community. Obviously if someone with over 160 questions isn't accepting answers, the "please accept an answer" reminder isn't working.

Update: I disagree with those who think that strongly encouraging accepted answers is all about points and not about helping people. You forget that an answer is going to be of use to more than just the OP. Accepting answers is how a later user can determine if an answer solves a problem, or is perceived as the best way to solve a problem by the questioner. It is a key proposition to the success of the site along with voting. I believe that an accepted answer makes a question and the answer much more useful to anyone else who comes along. We should do whatever we can to encourage accepted answers. We've already added the ability to answer and accept your own answer, notifications, and now the acceptance rate notification.

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50% seems low. I say, anything under 98% should put you on the wall! – Shog9 Aug 24 '09 at 20:25
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Your accept rate at meta is low too. – John Aug 24 '09 at 20:37
See my other question: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/17055/… – tvanfosson Aug 24 '09 at 20:40
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I think the concept of "accepting" doesn't apply to most meta questions. – Mehrdad Afshari Aug 24 '09 at 20:48
If you can't answer a question acceptable, whose shame it is? – Ladybug Killer Aug 25 '09 at 12:51

7 Answers

Anti-badges?

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Positive badges only! – Andrew Grimm May 6 '11 at 0:26

I think you would find that many would view that as a sick accomplishment, and fight to get to the top of the wall, thus defeating the purpose.

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Certainly possible. I doubt if most people would feel this way. Note that I explicitly left open the possibilty that no one would appear on the wall of shame and kept it to only people who ask a fair number of questions without acknowledging an answer that solves their problem. – tvanfosson Aug 24 '09 at 20:37

Having the number on all their questions is shameful enough. There's no reason to make a another outlet to show their disrespect. When they ask a question you can make the decision of whether or not you want to help them.

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No wall of shame. Stackoverflow is about knowledge exchange not getting people to accept answers. The good answers are voted up to the top, which is like a pseudo accepted answer.

Besides I rely on the votes more than the accepted answers. I would like to see a requirement for a user to put the reason they are accepting the answer.

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Even if there were such a thing (which I disagree with in the first place). For it to have any meaning, people would have to go and look at it and remember those folks as they are browsing the questions. As for it pushing the OPs to accept answers, they already see their % whenever they look at their question and they get reminded to accept an answer via an alert.

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Do mind that while some questions receive answers, that doesn't mean that the people who asked them are being helped by them. I have 2 or 3 questions that have no accepted answer, 1 of which I've solved in the mean time. I can't delete them anymore since they're too old. Also, they serve a historical purpose, as people may look the same stuff up in the future. If they come across this, it might be helpful to them(Jeff describes this as one of the main reasons Stackoverflow gets page-views from Google searches)

Also, Stackoveflow, Serverfault and Superuser are about being helped, not about scoring points. If you're using a system of "good behavior" and "bad behavior" based on who votes and who accepts answers to their questions, than it would seem you care more about your rating than helping people.

If people come here once, ask a question, are helped and never use the system, that's fine by me, because they're a minority.

A "wall of shame" will be the end of these sites, there isn't a doubt in my mind about that.

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I disagree with your perceived motivation of my question. See my update. – tvanfosson Aug 24 '09 at 20:35
If you solved the question in the meantime, post your own answer to it, wait the two days to see if anyone else chimes in, and then accept it. Make sure that your answer is a very thorough description of what you did to solve the issue. – devinb Aug 25 '09 at 12:33

Not all questions are easily answerable.

I don't mean "subjective" I mean obscure questions about the depths of the API that no one has seen in two decades. In these cases, the user will have a low 'acceptance' rate, because the answers to their questions (and there may be many) were unable to solve the issue. Their acceptance rate is low because SO failed them.

And you think the accurate response to this is to shame them?

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If 60%+ of your questions are not answerable, I'd say the problem is with the you, and not the system. – Jonathan Sampson Aug 25 '09 at 12:54
So, you're saying that if Stephen Hawking asks you a quantum physics question, and you can't answer it. The problem is with Stephen Hawking? Or, if Jon Skeet asks a C# question, and no one else can answer it, that Jon Skeet is just not bright enough to ask the right question? – devinb Aug 25 '09 at 13:22
I'd say that even Jon Skeet can't stump everyone 60% of the time. The same is probably true of Stephen Hawking. Remember, too, that people can answer and accept their own answer for a question. Even an answer that says "I can't find a solution to this." is better than leaving it open-ended. Discussion type questions should be asked on meta, anyway. – tvanfosson Aug 25 '09 at 21:33
You're assuming that Stephen Hawking is asking any question he has. I'm assuming that bright people, leaders in their field, may only rarely have questions, and they're likely to be some damn good ones. – devinb Aug 26 '09 at 12:26

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