Has anyone else encountered user Shore? This is only a recent discovery for me but he seems to ask a lot (473) of questions that are seemingly low-quality. By that I mean they are vague, omit important details and so on.

Or is this just me? Just curious what others' experiences are here.

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25% accept rate
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Have people started a cleanup after the whole John T incident? – alex Sep 25 '09 at 5:59
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@Alex: who is John T? – RSolberg Sep 25 '09 at 6:02
Take a look here: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/23347/…. Most of the comments have been deleted, but Jeff had about 40 comments on his question. – alex Sep 25 '09 at 6:11
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You mean ask a lot of low-quality questions. Answering low quality questions isn't nearly such a problem :) – Jon Skeet Sep 25 '09 at 6:32
Answers aren't really edited by others, they're just downvoted. Qeustions are edited to make them answerable; when they become good, with no real help from the author, they start to be upvoted. – alex Sep 25 '09 at 6:38
Missed out on all that talk and fire on question:23347 before the dawn. – random Sep 25 '09 at 7:44
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Fascinating! You've created your own Streisand Effect! Now I want to click on this users profile – Yar Sep 25 '09 at 9:10
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8 Answers

That user, without answering any questions and having only voted under a double dozen, now has close powers. But that's not the end of it.

Repping hard off the back of very low quality questions, doesn't seem to ever learn anything or apply any of the knowledge.

On a recent jQuery question, it was put as to where the code was grabbed from. Turns out it was from the Learning jQuery site. A site which features nice and thorough tutorials.

But, the user just copied the code, put it into the question box and let the community explain it. Totally missing the point of actually reading the information on the site the source code was nicked from.

Questions are often vague and you will see that user then comment on the answers about how they're missing something or not accounting for whatever charset that is suddenly part of the question, despite not being there at all.

Over and over again. Of poor quality and a selfish air.

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Seems like someone who may be a bit selfish... Asking 400+ questions without answering any is not someone who I would feel is a member of the community.

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Not only that, he doesn't even properly reward the people that take time to answer his questions: 10 upvotes, 9 downvotes, 37% accept rate. – Stephan202 Sep 25 '09 at 6:08
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@Stephan: he is starting to sound like a jerk... – RSolberg Sep 25 '09 at 6:09
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I don't think anybody "owes" answers and I am fine with people asking a lot of questions so long as they put sufficient effort into those questions. There is no quid pro quo with questions and answers. – cletus Sep 25 '09 at 6:11
He's not the only one. There are others out there with similar patterns. Although I fail to see why they do this. What could they possibly gain from the rep points if nobody respects them? – alex Sep 25 '09 at 6:12
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@cletus: I agree... Nobody does "owe" anything, but at the end of the day, I like givers more than takers. Especially on sites like SO where KARMA should come into play... – RSolberg Sep 25 '09 at 7:24
What could they possibly gain from the rep points if nobody respects them? His most upvoted question is what is the difference between <b> and <strong>, a duplicate I may add. He doesn't even answers to the comments on his answers. – perbert Sep 25 '09 at 13:22
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I'm not sure that asking a lot of questions in and of itself is a bad thing, as long as you also up-vote and accept answers. We need to expect that some of the users are going to be students that are just starting to learn the basics of programming and while they may have questions, they may not be able to answer many questions yet. – Rob Z Sep 25 '09 at 13:38
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@Rob: Of course. But asking lots of questions and asking lots of questions without answering comments and the willingness to learn anything are different concepts. We are talking about the latter here. – innaM Sep 25 '09 at 13:58
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I must admit I find it amusing that people are starting to pull up examples of users who match the blankman, sasha, kirsh, and other users criteria that many of us used to use as an example of this exact problem. Back then most people just guffawed about it and didn't think it was any issue, but now that more users are being discovered that use the exact same methods to achieve high rep (namely asking hundreds of piss poor questions that will each get one or two sympathy upvotes) there is a greater vocalization about it.

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Good! At least one of us is having fun. And now that you mention kirsh: he change a lot. Instead of asking piss poor questions, he is now into giving piss poor answers. – innaM Sep 25 '09 at 14:01
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@Manni Whenever you see Diago edit a kirsh/krish/joe post on SU you can see that it's always the same things. Spelling, grammar, information. That's kind of like watching the teacher try and teach the kid that never wants to learn for himself. – random Sep 25 '09 at 23:48
I could live with the spelling and grammar. – innaM Sep 26 '09 at 9:30
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alex said earlier in this thread:

He's not the only one. There are others out there with similar patterns. Although I fail to see why they do this. What could they possibly gain from the rep points if nobody respects them?

You're all missing the point. He's not after the rep. He doesn't care, and probably isn't even aware of what reputation is, except as some abstract thing that other SO guys seem to think is really important for some reason. He's asking questions purely to get answers, and he'll keep asking them so long as some rep-hungry chump* is willing to trade 5 minutes of his time for some worthless currency. Sounds like he's on to a good thing.

So, what do we do about it? Manni's post has some links to some previous suggestions. I think that's a good start: any method for discouraging feeding the question pumps has got to include making the troublemakers harder to hide.

* I'm one of those chumps too, so don't take it too personally.

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I had a bad, totalitarian, and most likely despised idea. Those questions are, sometimes, valuable, if not for the question itself, for the answers provided. If a question doesn't give value, then they should be deleted.

As a way of punishment for acting as a jerk not giving enough thought before asking, some of his answers could be disowned and his rep recalculated.

I'm not comfortable with the idea, but I'm not comfortable with the idea of a Close capable-400 question asker-no answers-half of votes negatives user.

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The mechanism for this is already in place: auto-community-wikification. It just seems that its parameters would need some tuning. – innaM Sep 25 '09 at 14:03
@Manni: yeah, I was thinking something like, that, but wiki answers/questions leave the old rep to the original user. What I'm proposing is a way for mods to wikify a question, with retroactive effects on the rep of the questioner and and perform a rep recalc just after that. – perbert Sep 25 '09 at 14:16
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Oh. I didn't know that you get to keep your rep when something is wikified. That in itself seems like a bug to me. – innaM Sep 25 '09 at 14:39
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User Shore asked his last question over a year ago (October 30 2009). Whatever "the deal" was, this specific situation has been resolved.

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...and many questions are still getting upvoted: stackoverflow.com/users/104015?tab=activity – Arjan Dec 15 '10 at 23:41
@Arjan: Is that a problem? I thought the problem was his behaviour, not him getting rewarded for it. – Andrew Grimm Dec 16 '10 at 1:55
No, no problem at all. But apparently not all questions were bad, if they're still getting upvotes. But: I was wrong, the badges are for views, not for upvotes. Hopefully the viewers found the answer they were looking for! – Arjan Dec 16 '10 at 7:36
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Whenever I run stats on the data dump he always manages to find himself on the top of lists that you don't want to be on. (he get a tiny amount of upvotes,

He is one of the reasons Jeff wants to increase the pain of downvotes.

I think the accept rate helps out a lot here, cause he also tends not to accept answers. He is not the only problem user.

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In my mind, downvotes should be 5 points at least. – alex Sep 25 '09 at 6:23
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its trickey, if you do that Rich B will lose half his rep and shore would maintain his editing capabilities, personally I don't care that much, most good users get very few downvotes - we need a better system for dealing with serial problem users ... but as I have said before an upvote != A for effort or C for correct. – waffles Sep 25 '09 at 6:27
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