I just read a question (what is database normalization) that asked about data normalization. If I had to guess, I would say that the person asking the question is not seeking an answer, but seeking to have their reputation points increased (see arguments below). This is the inherent problem with giving reputation points (and badges) in order to rank users. People will start to game the system and the integrity of the system will be tarnished. The good questions and answers will get lost in the heap of people looking for more reputation points.

Anybody worth anything would have simply typed "database normalization" into a search engine and found this from wikipedia. In there is a wealth of solid information about data normalization.

Arguments for why I believe AJ is gaming the system:

  • In a prior question, he writes "I am pretty much a Sybase expert, an experienced developer, and very comfortable learning new stuff." Anybody with this level of expertise should either know the answer to this question or be able to find it quickly.
  • He gives many answers to SQL-related questions which suggests he knows his stuff

I apologize to AJ for singling out him and his question -- he's just one of the many who are gaming the system -- but it was the tipping point for me and my use of SO.

UDPATE

Maybe my view of what SO is is not in line with the rest of the community. I see SO as a source for answers to the tough questions where smart people hang out and help other people with their problems -- not as a learning portal. Finding answers to general questions like "what is normalization" is not what I use SO for.

GvS makes a good point in the answers below: "The most easy to gain reputation, is asking general questions. While real, specific, questions get a lot less votes."

Contrary to what many people have alluded to in their comments, I don't care if AJ or anybody else gets a high reputation score -- I care about finding and sharing good answers to tough questions. And for spoulson, who thinks I'm gaming the system by asking this question, I would be more than willing to drop all reputation points earned from this question -- I'm not here for reputation points.

To finish on a constructive note:

I love the way SO tries to see if the question you are asking has already been asked and I think the search functionality works quite well too. It is features like these that keep me coming back.

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SO is not dead yet, 1.5 years later. Can you give us a time estimate for your predicted death of SO? – Adam Davis Mar 22 '10 at 16:11
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@Pollyanna Sorry I'm a few weeks late, but I was worried about the death of SO. The revised estimate is 2 years (December 21, 2012). – muntoo Nov 1 '10 at 2:37
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Sep 4 '09 at 20:48

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14 Answers

Honestly the purpose behind Stackoverflow to me isn't the reputation system or the idea that it's a game.

It's that it's basically a one stop resource to find answers to common and sometimes very uncommon questions, and you don't get annoyed with popups or fees like with similar services.

On another note, there is a searching feature for a reason, and it was built to be extremely search friendly for a reason. Who cares what the "top" questions are when anything relevant to your question is a search/tag click away.

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See this Uservoice suggestion: Don't base the reputation on soft, fun questions.

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Yes. All the highest rated questions are bleh while the really interesting ones languish unanswered for a long time and have limited exposure. – cfeduke Oct 29 '08 at 14:26
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Unfortunately on SO interesting == specific which is why they get less attention. – Ross Oct 29 '08 at 14:29
My rant is not about soft, fun questions, but rather the gaming of the system by seeding easy-to-find-the-answer-to questions for the sake of garnering reputation points. – jgormley Oct 29 '08 at 14:38
I'm the guy who submitted the "Don't base..." to Uservoice. According to Jeff in the podcasts, the points/badges are there to guide our behavior, but points for questions promotes behavior contrary to Jeff's goals for SO. The reward for a question is... the answer. Just give points to answerers. – Corey Trager Oct 29 '08 at 14:41
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This is not a question. And I am just answering to gain reputation (thx for voting me up) ;-)

I think you are correct, it is easier to gain reputation by asking silly questions, as to try to answer them decently.

The most easy to gain repution, is asking general questions. While real, specific, questions get a lot less votes.

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Maybe AJ's motives are indeed getting reputation by asking a question he already knows the answer to. But why is this gaming the system? If reputation makes people ask good questions that get good answers then the reputation system is doing exactly what it needs to do.

And even if AJ is asking questions that he already knows the answer to then just maybe he's doing it to because it was information he found missing on this site.


@jgormley: I don't really get what "waste" you are talking about. If the questioner doesn't need the answer to his question then someone else might. If no-one needs it then the question probably won't get any votes and it will soon lose visibility. Just like any other question. The questioner won't get any reputation from bad questions. You don't get reputation for asking questions, you get it from people voting for the questions. No gaming there, you only get reputation when you create something people actually like.

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I can somewhat agree with your first point that IF reputation points make people ask good questions and get good answers, then they are working. BUT Asking questions that you know (or can easily find) the answer to is a waste. SO is not lacking if it doesn't contain every question and answer. – jgormley Oct 29 '08 at 14:36
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Reputation is just a integer in a database. If he wants to get so excited about it that he trips over others to answer questions or asks questions that are "borderline" useful, so what?

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Redundancy of information. If you have borderline questions all over the place, it makes it difficult to weed through the garbage to get to the good questions. SO is a resource, just like other message boards and asking blind questions without even attempting to find the answer first is pure lazy. – jgormley Oct 29 '08 at 14:29
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@jgormley: So there's something wrong with wanting google to find SO as a resource for technical matters before it finds other sites? – tloach Oct 29 '08 at 14:35
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That's the reason we have self moderation though. To produce redundancy links to repeated questions and to close/edit/retag things as needed. It's the responsibility of the community as a whole instead of the leaders to manage the information. – This Mat Oct 29 '08 at 14:36
@tloach: There's nothing wrong with wanting google to find SO as a resource for technical matters -- I'm already seeing that happen. My non-question was a diatribe on reputation points and how they lead to people gaming the system and how that will lead to cruft in SO. – jgormley Oct 29 '08 at 14:44
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You're not the first to point out AJ's idiocy. I agree - he is clearly gaming the system.

I'm not sure his motive, and if it really causes harm though.

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The entire reputation system is flawed when you base power (moderation) on your score. Especially as we're not the most ego-free demographic industry in the market!

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I could also create 2 accounts and each day just have them upvote answers for each other, but what would the point be? Sure, the system can be gamed, but who cares? The worst possible result is that someone gets abilities they shouldn't have and goes on a question-changing/closing rampage, which the rest of us clean up before getting the user account closed. All crowd-sourced systems have weaknesses such as this, it doesn't change the fact that the site provides very quick answers to some interesting and challenging technical questions.

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I would tend to disagree, although it is possible that many are in fact "gaming" the system, I believe that it is still useful to have the question asked/answered here on SO simply because this can be used as yet another source for information. In the end, reputation doesn't matter that much anyway...

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I agree that it's a bit annoying to see all the gaming going on, but I don't think it will cause SO to die. I think that it's a smart move by SO, because instead of being a place where questions are answered that are not answered anywhere else, it will become a place where all questions are answered (possibly just by linking to other places with answers). By becoming a one-stop shop for finding answers, SO gets more eyeballs, and more ad revenue...

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The merit of asking a question is to make SO more complete - and if you have something you have already solved but want to see how others react to this you should post your question here.

That said, you generally earn more points by giving an answers than by asking a question. In one way or another (by playing the game) all SO users benefit from it.

From "fun questions" answers I know I can:

  • Use Simply noise when I am bothered by office noise
  • Buy a decent kewboard

And that I am not the only one facing the same challenges.

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I totally agree that the reputation system encourages people to write certain types of question (those with a broad appeal), just for the sake of the points that will be garnered. I know this because I've been guilty of it myself in the past.

However, I don't see that it really does any great harm - the net result is that someone gets a lot of reputation cheaply, so what? I definitely think it's an exaggeration to suggest that it will cause SO to die.

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This practice is partially fixed with the Great Reputation Recalc

The reputation gained by asking questions is greatly reduced.

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I just realized when this question was asked... – Juan Manuel Mar 22 '10 at 16:11
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as you see, nobody's perfect, not all information that's on a screen always magically goes to the mind of the reader... – user145047 Mar 22 '10 at 16:26
Are you following me? that's kinda creepy... – Juan Manuel Mar 22 '10 at 16:44
no, I've been following the subject, not you... – user145047 Mar 22 '10 at 17:01
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I think the problem is bigger than that. I have had more than one question "answered" by a points whore and had to re-ask the question and get flamed as a result to try to get a deeper answer. I don't say that a points system is a bad idea, but these guys with 10k+ that pounce on all the easy questions every day should have some frequency factor as a quotient to discourage this.

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References to said questions? – Jon Seigel Mar 22 '10 at 15:59
I was just going to ask for links also. – mmyers Mar 22 '10 at 16:00
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