I know it's like it is for some reason, but on Gaming we get a lot of new users that post comments as answers because they have 1 rep.

Is it possible to lower the rep requirement for commenting to 1 rep?

What is the official reason for it being 50?

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Thanks @Pop, upvoted them -- however, Jeff's replies do not explain why this is like it is, and why it can't be lowered to 1 on every post (as far as I could find). There are quite a few users on Gaming that post answers as comments because they cannot comment. – Juan Manuel Dec 2 '10 at 20:16
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@Juan - yeah, it gets old to be cleaning up the new user "me too" answers (I see it on Seasoned Advice), but I'm not sure having a bunch of "me too" comments would be an improvement. – justkt Dec 2 '10 at 20:28
If you are aiming to get this changed on gaming only, you should post this on the gaming meta. – jjnguy Dec 2 '10 at 20:29
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@jjnguy We see it a lot on Gaming, but I hear about it a lot on other sites as well. And since we're expanding into new ground here as SE 2.0 grows, it's going to be an increasingly prevalent problem. – Grace Note Dec 2 '10 at 21:21
Probably you wanted to say that they are posting comments as answers, not the other way around? – sth Dec 2 '10 at 23:58
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5 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

We funnel users to the answer input box for a reason -- because the focus is on getting answers to questions, not meta-commentary. Commenting is a privilege that should be earned by providing useful answers. And 50 rep isn't much.

It's highly unlikely a random drive-by user will

  • understand our Q&A goals
  • understand our commenting system

So by the time they earn 50 rep, they should have learned roughly how things work, and be in a position to offer a useful comment and not a "+1 AWESOME ANSWER" or "NO U R WRONG!!" sort of comment.

New users can't ask for clarifications except as answers

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I still think cleaning up comments would be easier than cleaning up answers, but fair enough. – Juan Manuel Dec 3 '10 at 1:35
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Well then, can the answer box clearly indicate how it's to be used. I think the new users often don't know where else to turn to get some interaction with the questioner or a specific answer. – Software Monk Dec 3 '10 at 1:45
I respectfully disagree. The problem is, if you assert that meta commentary isn't useful, then why is it a part of the site in the first place? Comments can contain valuable corrections and minor points of additional information that aren't substantial enough to on their own warrant their own answers but serve to improve the quality of their parent answer. – James McMahon Mar 25 at 16:15
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@james no, I assert that meta commentary from new and inexperienced users is unlikely to be useful. And I have a lot of data to back that position up. For one thing, just look at the fraction of "answers" on questions (this requires zero rep) that are not answers at all.. – Jeff Atwood Mar 26 at 5:37
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Answers are, in some ways, harder to clean up than comments as they have no utility outside of moderator intervention to remove quickly. Comments can be flagged because one of the flag reasons is noise; there is no equal option for answers. There's also that whole thing where every time a new user posts a comment-as-answer... there's often a very unwelcoming surge of downvotes that follow it.

However, answers are a lot more visible to receive that clean up. Posting an answer bumps it to the front page. There is also the "new posts by new users" list which helps identify these very comment-as-answer posts. Comparatively, there is no real method to monitor for comments apart from manually opening every post or every user's activity logs. If a comment is placed on a really old post, then it can remain unseen for a very long time. Multiply that by a lot to see how problematic it can become when that's granted to everyone.

That's speculation, of course; we don't have exactly proof that this is opening some floodgate and I don't even think it'll turn that bad. But I think it would still be wiser that we have some method conducive to policing and monitoring comments better before we reduce the threshold.

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On top of this, there's a whole system in place to deal with users who post tons of unsuitable answers (especially if they get flagged...) - lousy / unwanted comments are much easier to get away with, largely because they're seen as disposable. – Shog9 Dec 2 '10 at 21:40
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The main point of the sites is to provide answers. If you don't have anything to say that answers the question it's not all that important that you post it.

New users need some time to learn that answers are the central point, not chatting in comments. The hope is they realize that "thank you" doesn't answer the question and therefore don't post it. Having comments available as an obvious place to post such valueless remarks can only increase their amount, not helping anybody.

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The reason there is a threshold for comments, is to prevent spammy comments.

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But answers can be posted with 1 rep – Juan Manuel Dec 2 '10 at 20:13
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I think answers are more likely to see spam than comments. I'm with Juan on this. – user27414 Dec 2 '10 at 20:15
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Answers are not blocked because if I've got good input to solve a problem, why should others lose out because you are new? New users need some way of getting rep. – Moshe Dec 2 '10 at 20:17
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I am not saying you shouldn't be able to answer with 1 rep, quite the contrary, you should be able to participate more (with commenting enabled from the beginning) – Juan Manuel Dec 2 '10 at 20:19
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The non-answers are a worse problem than spam comments. And nothing prevents spam answers, which are more visible than comments anyway, and therefore more enticing to the spammer. – Software Monk Dec 2 '10 at 21:17
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I suggest we allow commenting and answers with 1 rep, and force a CAPTCHA for all posts until the user meets the minimal rep currently required to post comments.

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The problem isn't bots. – muntoo Mar 6 '11 at 1:35
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