This is a terrible idea
SO is based on the idea that the collective community is responsible for the overall quality of the site. One of the most important aspects of community moderation is making sure that everyone's contributions are available for voting, editing, and other moderation. Being able to large-scale ignore users creates unnecessary divisions within the community. It's a bad idea for the same reasons that serial voting is a bad idea. You need to just the content, not the user.
This is something that I think goes against the very nature of community driven content. Stack Overflow co-founder Jeff Atwood writes about some of the problems of an ignore/block feature to an online community in his blog:
- It allows you to ignore bad behavior. If someone is hateful or harassing, why complain? Just mute. No more problem. Except everyone
else still gets to see a person being hateful or harassing to another
human being in public. Which means you are now sending a message to
all other readers that this is behavior that is OK and accepted in
your house.
It puts the burden on the user. A kind of victim blaming — if someone is rude to you, then "why didn't you just mute / block them?"
The solution is right there in front of you, why didn't you learn to
use the software right? Why don't you take some responsibility and
take action to stop the person abusing you? Every single time it
happens, over and over again?
It does not address the problematic behavior. A mute is invisible to everyone. So the person who is getting muted by 10 other
users is getting zero feedback that their behavior is causing
problems. It's also giving zero feedback to moderators that this
person should probably get an intervention at the very least, if not
outright suspended. It's so bad that people are building their own
crowdsourced block lists for Twitter.
It causes discussions to break down. Fine, you mute someone, so you "never" see that person's posts. But then another user you like
quotes the muted user in their post, or references their @name, or
replies to their post. Do you then suppress just the quoted section?
Suppress the @name? Suppress all replies to their posts, too? This
leaves big holes in the conversation and presents many hairy technical
challenges. Given enough personal mutes and blocks and ignores, all
conversation becomes a weird patchwork of partially visible
statements.
Addressing your points directly:
High-rep users who don't want to be bothered by low-quality questions can avoid encountering the same user again after they've asked a question deemed low-quality
This is already in place in the form of post bans and other manual suspensions for repeatedly posting bad content.
Trolls and other unhelpfuls can be safely ignored if a user feels insulted or offended by a derogatory comment
Like Becuzz points out, our existing community moderation tools already take care of this problem. In fact, it does a superb job and lets everyone else benefit as moderators suspend or even delete problematic accounts.
Users could have the option of ignoring anyone already being ignored by a certain number of other users
If implemented, this would lead to truly elitist behaviors. And depending on the interconnectedness of the ignore lists, it could end up causing a bunch of voting rings. After all, everyone else in that tag is collectively ignored.