I'm pretty sure the whole reputation system is put in place so that newcomers learn the different concepts before actually being allowed to use them, and that as a member of one of the other sites in the group you get a higher initial reputation score when you first register to one of the sister sites (like the new stackexchange sites that come out of private beta).

That said, why do I get 100 initial rep score for registering, but need 125 to be able to downvote?

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2 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Because you should be focusing on upvotes. More importantly, it is to prevent "drive-by" downvotes - the rep system is used as a rough gauge on how much the community "trusts" you.

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I think that's a better explanation for the rep system than 'the system trusts you'. It is actually the community that assigns the trust. – Dave Van den Eynde Oct 20 '10 at 14:40
Actually, I was trying to contribute to the site by downvoting a wrong answer. – Dave Van den Eynde Oct 20 '10 at 14:41
@Dave Van den Eynde: If you downvote, you can contribute even more by adding your own answer, or commenting on why you downvoted the post. – In silico Oct 21 '10 at 2:05
@In silico I know that, silly, but I'm unable to downvote. – Dave Van den Eynde Nov 9 '10 at 11:08

maybe to get some (just very little) feeling of how the new site works before being able to downvote.

I mean someone who is good at programming (Stack Overflow) is not automatically that good at let's say Mathematics.

For sure you must not be an expert to be able to recognize a bad answer, or to decide that an answer is not useful (for you). But getting 25 points of reputation isn't that hard, not for a theme you are interested in.

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