I've been doing a lot of reading on Meta about this subject and I cannot find a definitive answer or view of what people think regarding this question. So, apologies if this has already been covered/closed/down-voted, etc!

I'm finding myself hesitating over whether or not to try and answer questions on stack overflow for users with very low accept rates. I notice there are a number of people experiencing this feeling as well.

My thought is thus; should users with a very low percentage of acceptance be banned from asking new questions? Maybe 'banning' is too harsh. Perhaps the user should be nagged by one of the dropdowns at the top of the page, i.e. "Have you considered accepting any of the 46 questions that you have not accepted an answer for?".

In my opinion, this should only apply to users with a low accept rate, i.e. less than 10%, WHEN the user has over N amount of questions within a particular timespan.

But, don't get me wrong on the whole accept rate functionality. I know it's been discussed to death from other angles, but I think users who generally can't be bothered to accept and clean up their questions should be made to, or encouraged to put some effort in. I know myself how frustrating it is to find an unaccepted question that potentially contains the answer to my problem. It's always a bit of a pain having to trawl through comments to see if the author has put a message along the lines of "Thanks, it worked!".

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80% accept rate
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4 Answers

up vote 17 down vote accepted

That feeling should come naturally. People are less inclined to answer questions from people with low acceptance %. And the user should be able to see that. If he does not, then it's a loss for him.

So I would say no, just let it come naturally.

You should also never restrict a user, since he could just log out and ask as a anonymous user, or create a new account. And then you're just creating a whole other type of a problem.

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Agreed. So why not something along the lines of a nag feature? It's not restricting, it's just hinting? – GenericTypeTea Nov 6 '09 at 13:04
There was a nag feature, when you clicked the profile and got a list of the questions, there was a text above all the unaccepted ones with a text asking if you wanted to accept an answer on that question. It's gone now for some reason. – Ólafur Waage Nov 6 '09 at 13:06
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+1 I hesitate over low-acceptance-rate users as well- which probably means that these users are actually being "punished" via community. I don't think anything needs to be changed. Now, new users on the other hand... =) – Joel Goodwin Nov 6 '09 at 13:08
Strange, I don't recall ever seeing this. I've been using SO for almost a year now. – GenericTypeTea Nov 6 '09 at 13:09
@Joel - I suppose that makes sense - why don't you post that as an answer? – GenericTypeTea Nov 6 '09 at 13:09
GenericTypeTea - look for the "XX% accept rate" against the question asker's name on an SO question. There are certain criteria (I don't recall) where it won't be shown, like new users who haven't enough rep to be Judged. – Joel Goodwin Nov 6 '09 at 13:38
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Aye, I've noticed that. My gripe is those who have been using the site for 8 months and have about 40-odd unaccepted questions and very few answers. – GenericTypeTea Nov 6 '09 at 13:44
Removed my answer as John Smither's comment was upvoted more than my original, and if meta-meta is generating more interest than meta, well it's all a little self-defeating. – Joel Goodwin Nov 6 '09 at 14:00
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@Joel: I would agree that the user is likely being naturally punished by the community, but they may well be unaware of it; certainly, people aren't likely to post a comment saying something like "I would answer this, but you don't accept answers, so I won't bother." More likely, they just won't get as many responses, and think nothing of it. – beska Nov 6 '09 at 14:03
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People just approach things differently. You for instance select an answer to accept for all your questions, which is a very good thing to do. So you either ask questions that can be answered, or select an answer that you felt helped you the most. Not everybody does that and it's a shame. – Ólafur Waage Nov 6 '09 at 14:06
@beska - it is a good point, but I wonder if something more "heavy-handed" is likely to push people away. I'm not saying it will - but I like SO's reluctance to chide directly. – Joel Goodwin Nov 6 '09 at 14:11
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I'm still for a nudge system of sorts that will tell these 'uninformed' users that they've got lots of questions to accept, and for the good of the community they should really think about accepting some. – GenericTypeTea Nov 6 '09 at 14:20
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I don't think that users should be out right banned from asking questions unless we are very careful about where the threshold kicks in. For example, someone might have a 10% accept rate, but they also only asked 10 questions where as someone else might have asked 100 questions.

However, I do think that it might be a good idea to add a short message addressing the user saying something like "You might encounter a lower response rate until you accept some answers!" This could either be on the user page, or it could show up when they go to create a new question, similar to the existing message for subjective questions.

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+1 Definately a good idea. – GenericTypeTea Nov 7 '09 at 9:22
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Preventing them from asking new questions is taking things a bit too far. I guess gentle reminders through comments would work. Disallowing new questions might drive them away from SO.

I normally would answer the question irrespective of the accept rate - but if the user has enough (acceptably answered) questions to his credit, I would post a comment with links to meta posts about accepting/upvoting.

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I don't think restricting a user's ability to ask more questions is a good idea. It may be that they just aren't getting good answers, particularly if the technology they're asking about is niche.

I know that there's nags in the question list on your profile, but perhaps once a month they could be nagged with a dismissable pop-up on the main question page.

I try not to use the answer percentage statistic but, as Ólafur points out, you do get a feel for whether it's worth spending a large amount of time attempting to help someone who doesn't play by the spirit of Stack Overflow. If I see a user who has a very low acceptance rate then I sometimes nudge them with a friendly reminder in the comments under the question. Quite often that's just enough because I think there's some folks who have just genuinely forgotten or haven't quite 'got it' with the way Stack Overflow works.

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Great point regarding the niche technology. – Ólafur Waage Nov 6 '09 at 16:06
+1 for the same reason. I think prodding a user with comments is the way to move forward. – Joel Goodwin Nov 6 '09 at 16:39
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