Reputation is primarily, from the system's perspective, about encouraging positive participation. If that's so, wouldn't a lower (personal) bar for upvoting questions make more sense when those questions are by users new to the system. I don't think that questions by new users automatically deserve an upvote, but I will typically upvote a question by new user in cases where the value of the question is marginal. I think that getting this early rep can have a tremendous impact on whether the person buys into the site(s).
I suggest that we reward this type of behavior. I suggest a bronze "Encourager" badge that is awarded after a person has upvoted 50 questions by users who have been on the site for less than 1 day. To reinforce this, similar badges could be awarded at the silver (Cheerleader) and gold (Motivator) for 400 and 1000 upvotes respectively. A flagged comment by the voter on any such question would disqualify that question from being counted in the total.
Update: The names are just suggestions, don't get hung up on them. I'm certainly open to alternatives.
Update2: An alternative would be to have this apply only to users with a rep of 1 and only on the day the question was asked. That way we're not encouraging massive upvotes of marginal questions, but still giving new users a small boost.
Update3: I know I'm probably wasting my breath, but let me explain my thinking. First, while answers to questions are valuable, the most value I have found on the site is through answering questions. Reputation is the key to driving this behavior; if you want reputation points, the only way to accumulate significant points is to answer questions. Getting people "hooked" on the reputation system, then, is a way to encourage people to participate in learning in a way that simply getting an answer to your question isn't. "Give a man a fish and he eats for a day, teach a man to fish and he'll never go hungry."
Simply handing out reputation at the start doesn't accomplish this, but getting that first vote does. Whether you think we live in a culture of self-congratulation (we do) or not, you can't deny that when someone affirms you, it has a positive effect on you and your attitude. The idea that I posit is that the bar ought not be so high when voting on a new user's first question -- a tiny bit of encouragement at this point, if at all possible, can start that user on a path that leads them to be a collaborator within the site rather than a consumer of the site. The latter isn't bad, but the former is better.
I already practice this behavior. If I see a question by a user with rep 1 that I feel I can upvote, then I do so. It hurts me (and the site) very little, actually not at all, and it may result in a new collaborator for the site. I'm simply trying to think of a way to encourage this type of behavior on a more global scale as I think it is a net benefit to everyone.
So far, the arguments are primarily with the mechanics of how to go about this. Ok, I'm flexible. Let's try to fix the mechanics so that it satisfies your sense of propriety. What if, to the restrictions above, we add that the question cannot also have received any downvotes or be closed within 24 hours, i.e., it can't be a bad question or in the wrong forum. To summarize, a question would need to fit the following formula before it would be eligible to count towards a badge.
- OP's rep is 1 (i.e., only first voter gets credit)
- Not community wiki (has to grant rep)
- Vote is cast within 24 hours (no mining old questions)
- No down votes or closed within 24 hours (not a bad question)
- No abusive/offensive comments on question by voter (consistent with goal)