Why am I getting this message?
As stated clearly in the about links on every page, the Stack Exchange web sites are question and answer sites, not help forums. This implies that all posts are expected to have some value for later visitors too. To enforce that, and to prevent help vampires making the answerers turn away from the communities, low-quality questions and answers are blocked. This includes posts from:
- users who can't be bothered to form sentences
- users who don't do the most basic kinds of research themselves
- users who barely even explain what it is they are trying to do
An automatic filter is in place to ban questions and/or answers from IP addresses or accounts with a history of extremely poor posts. To avoid bypassing the filter its internal rules are a secret, but it is partly based on downvotes cast by other members of the communities.
Once you have posted too many bad quality questions or answers, you will be banned from posting more, and you will see the error message.
Are deleted posts taken into account too?
Yes, deleted questions (if less than 30 days old) and deleted answers count towards an automatic ban.
It's not a problem to have deleted posts. But if a large percentage of your posts are deleted by yourself or the community, then apparently they were not suitable for the site. But meanwhile they might have wasted time from users who read them, or even responded to them. Therefore deleted posts have an effect on the filter, among many other secret factors.
Beware that an account with a high public reputation might very well have many deleted posts, including auto-deleted old low-score questions, all of which are only visible to moderators.
Is a question/answer ban the same as a suspension?
No, a suspension is a manual, temporary penalty during which a user cannot ask questions, nor post answers. All other privileges, including commenting and voting, are also revoked by temporarily setting the reputation to 1. Such suspension is publicly visible to other users.
A ban is enforced automatically, and only prevents posting questions or answers. It is invisible to others.
How do I avoid getting a question ban?
Read the FAQ. Investigate and search before you ask. Put some effort in your questions.
All questions are expected to have some value for later visitors too. So if many of your questions do not get any answer, are downvoted, edited by other users, closed, or deleted by yourself or the community, then apparently they did not meet the required quality. Be sure to understand why that happens, and learn from that. Don't simply repost the same question again.
If you're not sure what qualifies as a "good question", there are some hints and tips available:
To learn about formatting:
How long do I have to wait before I can post again? What can I do to release the ban? How can I reactivate my account?
Automatic bans never expire or "time out." This means that you cannot simply wait for a certain amount of time: if you do not take action, you will never be allowed to post again.
Before you do anything else, fix your existing posts! As noted above, down-votes cast by the rest of the community factor into the ban - so the single best thing you can do to get it lifted is to address any objections raised by others. Were your past questions unclear? Did they fail to show any effort on your part? Poorly worded, titled, formatted, and overly long or short? Then fix them!
If you are banned from asking questions but you tripped the heuristic by just a tiny bit, then writing a few quality answers that get upvoted might enable you to ask questions again. But as the internals of the filter are secret, there is no way to know for sure. And even if you're lucky then you're still very close to being banned again, if you get new downvotes.
If you really, really think the ban is an error, then email the team directly using the "contact us" link provided at the bottom of every page. But note that reactivation of banned accounts is not a high priority.
Can I simply create a new account?
No. The automatic ban is at a lower level than account.
I'll just ask on Super User or Server Fault, and they'll migrate my question to the correct site!
Migrations are not possible if your account is banned from asking questions on the destination site. It will simply be closed as off topic, but not migrated.
Does this apply to Meta too?
Yes, but the threshold of votes in the auto ban calculation is reduced to better reflect the idea that downvotes can be much more common on meta.