I've noticed that marginally appropriate questions seem to generate a lot of reputation for the poster. For example, Shawn's "Best place to meet female programmers", while being at -6 at the time of this post, has actually generated 206 rep points (+280 -74) for him. There are many other examples - often having to do with "What's your favorite X?"

UPD: jop posted a link in the comments to a uservoice entry which talks about having subjective answers receive less reputation. this will probably help, but only in cases where there are many comments.

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If it's what the community wants, then it's going to get a positive response. But this question is subjective, argumentative, not programming related, has no objectively factual answer, is discussion oriented, etc, etc, etc. Closing. – Adam Davis Oct 3 '08 at 17:13
Considering how many answers there were in the first 20 mins, I think people want to discuss this. Also, there are plenty of stackoverflow related question which are not strictly programming relate, including your own stackoverflow.com/questions/57539/… – Eugene Katz Oct 3 '08 at 17:27
@Katz: Why not repost as a community question? That way, the answers wouldn't all be about how you're exploiting the thing you complain about yourself. – Mike F Oct 3 '08 at 17:31
stackoverflow.uservoice.com/pages/general/suggestions/21131 -- make subjective questions earn less reputation – jop Oct 3 '08 at 18:02
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Should be moved to Meta, and has probably already been discussed there. – Gabriel Hurley Aug 25 '09 at 20:15
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Aug 26 '09 at 0:25

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6 Answers

The obvious answer is that for askers, the system rewards popularity, IE generating a lot of discussion. This is essentially the dog house problem (Aha! Looks like I was thinking of the Bike Shed Problem!): Propose a design for a nuclear reactor, nobody will question you. Propose a design for a doghouse and everyone will want to chime in with their own doghouse design.

The questions that generate the most discussion are the ones with the easiest (or just plain subjective) answers.

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You're probably thinking about Parkinson's Law of Triviality: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_of_the_bikeshed – JesperE Oct 3 '08 at 17:37
Yes, that's it. I think I've only seen reference to the OpenBSD post before, and somewhere along the line my mind substituted "doghouse" for "bikeshed" – Ryan Oct 3 '08 at 17:40
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Do you seriously have nothing better to worry about then somebody getting rep points for a question that you don't like?

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I'm not worrying about it, just wondering why this is happening – Eugene Katz Oct 3 '08 at 17:38
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For starters, it'd help if you didn't do it.

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You have gained 12 rep from this less-than-marginally-appropriate question so far...


32 now.
9 upvotes, 6 down, 78 rep gained for the OP.

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You've got to give him style-points for both decrying it and doing it in the same post though :) – Mike F Oct 3 '08 at 17:11
I do. And I give myself style points for giving the type of snarky response that will definitely earn me rep as well. – Chris Marasti-Georg Oct 3 '08 at 17:13
And here's me with max rep for the day, so net +ve votes on my post giving me net -ve points. – Mike F Oct 3 '08 at 17:24
Yeah, I'm maxed out too. 1 good answer and you're done. It's almost a disincentive to continue answering questions till midnight UTC. – Chris Marasti-Georg Oct 3 '08 at 18:05
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New suggestion on uservoice: Net negative votes should not result in net positive rep

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I think we should let the forum speak. if you don't like them, vote them down. I think anything else would be in danger of being heavy handed and legislative.

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