Yes. It happens once in a while.
The most funny fact is that without a manually attached bounty a good question scarcely gets an answer at all - the regular sewage flow is so fast, that good questions almost never have a chance to meet someone who can answer.
To me, this fact is a foul shame for a site that was intended for programmers but turned into online typo-spotting / trivial-code-writing service.
As of the general flow - don't forget answers: it is not uncommon, when a trivial question gets a half-dozen of answers, ALL of which are wrong. Because of the same tolerant policy - writing total rubbish costs you nothing but occasionally can bring some points from a fellow illiterate or a kind-hearted nurse. And even being forced to delete his answer, rep-whore keeps overall balance at zero.
The problem is that Stack Overflow has changed. And for a changed site one needs changed rules. There is always a balance between scarcity and abundance - one has to moderate them wisely, as the latter is no better than the former. When visitors are scarce, they have to be lured in with all the might. Yet, when they are overflowing, there should be some moderation.
Old man Parkinson once discovered that principle in his truly brilliant article "THE SHORT LIST, OR PRINCIPLES OF SELECTION", where he clearly shows how a position has to be equally fitted with baits and spikes.
I'll take the liberty to cite
Wanted-- Acrobat capable of crossing a slack wire 200 feet above raging
furnace. Twice nightly, three times on Saturday. 53 Salary offered
£25 (or $70 U.S.) per week. No pension and no compensation in the
event of injury. Apply in person at Wildcat Circus between the hours of 9
A.M. and 10 A.M.
The wording of this may not be perfect but the aim should be so to
balance the inducement in salary against the possible risks involved that
only a single applicant will appear. It is needless to ask for details of
qualifications and experience. No one unskilled on the slack wire would find
the offer attractive. It is needless to insist that candidates should be
physically fit, sober, and free from fits of dizziness. They know that. It
is just as needless to stipulate that those nervous of heights need not
apply. They won't. The skill of the advertiser consists in adjusting the
salary to the danger. An offer of £1000 (or $3000 U.S.) per week
might produce a dozen applicants. An offer of £15 (or $35 U.S.)
might produce none. Somewhere between those two figures lies the exact sum
to specify, the minimum figure to attract anyone actually capable of doing
the job. If there is more than one applicant, the figure has been placed a
trifle too high.
Let us now take, for comparison, a less extreme example.
Wanted-- An archaeologist with high academic qualifications willing to spend
fifteen years in excavating the Inca tombs at Helsdump on the Alligator
River. Knighthood or equivalent honor guaranteed. Pension payable but never
yet claimed. Salary of £2000 (or $6000 U.S.) per year. Apply in
triplicate to the Director of the Grubbenburrow Institute, Sickdale, Ill.,
U.S.A.
Here the advantages and drawbacks are neatly balanced. There is no need to insist that candidates must be patient, 54 tough, intrepid, and single. The terms of the advertisement have eliminated all who are not.
I hope you get the idea.
The same principle should be applied to the modern SO.
- First, number of baits can be reduced. Believe me, there are many people who are willing to share their knowledge just for sake of it, not for rep points or badges.
- Second, number and size of spikes can be enraged. Say, current ratio 1:5 is embarrassing. Especially taking into account comforting upvotes (or solidarity ones, when two illiterates, got downvoted for their wild guess answers missing the point by a mile, happily upvoting each other). A comforting upvote will reward one fivefold! I'd make ratio 1:2.
Incidentally, why not to make an upvote to cost at least a penny? It will make all the repwhores think twice before spending!
There are could be other measures. But it's no use to sit and devise them, unless some political will to the change will be shown.
Beside other benefits, it will give back value to the SO reputation, which has devaluated into soil.