So I wrote a question about blocking certain chars on passwords. This became tremendously unpopular and it seemed like every day everyone wanted to rain on my parade. Eventually "I got it", agreed completely with what people were posting to me, and just wanted to withdraw my question so that my reputation doesn't slide even further down hill. Unfortunately the system is designed such that it won't let me withdraw my question or redeem myself here. Instead, I just get daily reputation attacks. That's a terrible system and needs to be changed.

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You should probably edit your question to add something at the bottom saying what you've said above (i.e. "I now understand why this is a bad question") and asking people (nicely!) not to downvote you any further. It may not work, but it can't hurt. – Graeme Perrow Jun 29 '09 at 11:57
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This question is a good example of the need to link between accounts in the different "sites" if at all possible. I'd like to see his question, but I can't. – Paolo Bergantino Jun 29 '09 at 16:11
stackoverflow.com/questions/1054928/… – user130116 Jun 29 '09 at 18:58
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9 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

As noted in a comment, the best solution is to edit the question to reflect the fact that your ideas have changed, and mark the answer that changed your mind as correct. If you edit the question people will read and understand that you "get it", rather than continuing to believe that you don't.

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I've applied this principle and hope it improves my reputation. I'm actually not some jerk that deserves reputation abuse. I do my programming for a living, working from home, and need every bit of reputation I can get and actively seek to earn it. – user130116 Jun 29 '09 at 13:19
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If I downvote a question, and the user edits it and turns it around, then he'll get an update from me, even if I would not have upvoted the question if it had been originally written that way. The 'growth' aspect is the kind of behaviour I would want to encourage. – devinb Jun 29 '09 at 13:26
"update" should say "upvote" – devinb Jun 29 '09 at 13:26
One of the other comments made recently is valid to tack on to what you say. It was that there should be a limit on the points you can lose on a downvoted question. – user130116 Jul 5 '09 at 19:14
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You can change it to community wiki.

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Hackish - but effective. – Rob Allen Jun 29 '09 at 12:41
Would this work any more? – Andrew Grimm Apr 6 '11 at 23:33
Good point, @Andrew. But you can still flag your own post and ask a moderator to change it to CW. – Ladybug Killer Apr 7 '11 at 8:12
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There should be a limit on the amount of points a person can lose on a question.

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Agree. If there can be a positive cap, there should be a negative cap as well (with the exception of removing by offensive). – Kyle Cronin Jul 2 '09 at 2:56
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As for deleting one of your posts, here are the rules in SO FAQ. As you can see, you can delete your own questions, but do not get back the reputation lost (but you loose the reputation gained). You will also earn a badge for "peer pressure". Alternatively you can mark the question as community wiki. Then you do not gain or loose any reputation, but the question is still there.

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These are reasonable rules. I'd go even further and not allow deletions after a certain period of time, say, a couple of days or so. At some point, posts are owned by all who contributed to them, not just the original poster. Deletion of a post that drew 50 comments and strong discussion, even by OP who saw several downvotes, just wouldn't be right. – John Pirie Jun 29 '09 at 12:01
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I kind of like the fact that you cannot delete it. Let it stand as a reminder that you should be cautious of the things you post and think things through more before posting .

We have enough noise coming into the site, we don't need anymore.

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I don't believe this is the case. Cannot the question owner close/delete their own question? I certainly can.

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I thought that Jeff mentioned on a podcast that if a question has upvoted answers (or possibly answers with a certain number of upvotes) then you can't delete it. – Graeme Perrow Jun 29 '09 at 11:55
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Yes the question owner should be able to delete his question.

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not when there are highly upvoted answers, otherwise the question owner can "silence" every answer, forever, with a single click. – Jeff Atwood Jun 29 '09 at 11:59
Allow all the answer rep to stay, then. – a_m0d Jun 29 '09 at 13:58
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It's not about the rep, it's about the information in those answers that would be lost. – Brad Gilbert Jun 29 '09 at 14:25
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To be honest, those daily reputation "attacks" can't have hurt too much as they are only 1 2 points each. One upvote erases ten five down votes.

In fact, if you accepted the answer which gave you the "ah-ha" moment and modified your question by adding a "thanks for the responses, I understand why this isn't a good idea now" line, I think you would see that rep come back in spades.

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It's actually -2 for a down vote so the ration is 5:1 not 10:1 – ChrisF Jun 29 '09 at 12:18
Ah - you're right. The one point is for the person doing the voting. Corrected my post. – Rob Allen Jun 29 '09 at 12:24
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It seems like accepting an answer should resolve this. It shows you've read another persons answer and realised you were mistaken.

If that doesn't work, I would edit the question to clarify, if that didn't work, mark it as Community Wiki (which makes you "immune" to reputation-changes from that question)

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