There's a category of general or open ended questions that often attract derisive or sarcastic responses. Here's one example. My idea is that a poster could mark their question as "Brainstorming" and in the spirit of Brainstorming, downvoting answers would not be allowed. This would encourage users to enter creative solutions without fear of losing reputation. Good ideas would percolate to the top and bad ideas would languish at the bottom with 0 votes.

Edited to add: Please downvote this if you disagree so that I can at least enjoy the irony.

2nd edit: I think my idea is fundamentally different than the community wiki -- or at least my understanding of it -- but since the CW itself is loosely defined and evolving I won't belabor the point. From the CW FAQ:

It turns out that it's a mechanism for members to voluntarily pose a question so that it will not accrue reputation points, only badges. It's used when some members might threaten to close it because it's perceived to lie outside acceptable criteria for site questions. (Or at least questions for which points should be awarded.)

I think I misunderstood this: I was under the impression that no points were accrued for CW questions or answers, but reading this it sounds like points are accrued for upvotes on answers but not the question.

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CW answers don't get/lose rep. CW questions don't get/lose rep. Non-CW answers to CW questions do get/lose rep. So make good and sure that the question is CW from the start. That said, i'm not sure SO... or any sort of voting system... makes for a very good "brainstorming" tool; a normal wiki would probably work better. – Shog9 Jul 3 '09 at 18:23
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3 Answers

I think the upvote only model is flawed but if you really want this you can always make the question community wiki.

Still the idea of a different type of question isn't without merit. I am just not sure it'd work in practice.

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StackOverflow meets the Special Olympics.

I don't care what brainstorming sessions you think you've been in, but if you go and propose something mind-blowingly dumb, you're going to get knocked for it, unless you are in some sort of anti-brainstorming session where EVERYONE is saying something mind-blowingly dumb and nobody else is smart enough to realize it.

If you are truly concerned with downvotes, you can always screw up the Community Wiki system moreso than it already is. People already use the CW status to prevent topics and answers from getting negatively affected by down votes, so that should solve your problem rather than introducing a Special Olympics mode.

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I'd flag this as offensive if I could. What's your problem with the Special Olympics? – Jamie Ide Jul 3 '09 at 17:23
Aside from the fact that the idea of "everybody being a winner" doesn't work in real life, nothing at all. And this is coming from someone who has a younger brother-in-law that has cerebral palsy and competes. – TheTXI Jul 3 '09 at 17:25
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The brainstorming sessions I think I've been in usually have two steps: 1) generate as many ideas as possible in a short amount of time and 2) screen the ideas for the best solution. I don't knock people for bad ideas in any situation; if I think it's a bad idea I try to think through it with them to the point where they realize it's a bad idea or where I realize that my initial impression was wrong. It's been my experience that thinking through a bad idea often leads to a good one. – Jamie Ide Jul 3 '09 at 17:28
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You might as well call this "Digg mode". Jeff has stated that he believes downvoting is an important part of the spectrum. Besides, you don't dismiss bad ideas when brainstorming?

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I do dismiss bad ideas when brainstorming (usually my own), but the point of brainstorming is that there is no penalty for proposing bad ideas. Having a penalty, even the loss of a measly 2 points, discourages participation. – Jamie Ide Jul 3 '09 at 16:30
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There's already a way to do that, though: make the question Community Wiki. – Hilarious Comedy Pesto Jul 3 '09 at 17:12
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You know what? Stating that my idea would make SO more like Digg is much worse than disparaging it with the same comparison to the Special Olympics. :-) – Jamie Ide Jul 3 '09 at 17:57
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