This may already have been discussed, but I couldn't find it...
It takes 50 rep to be able to post a comment, but you can post an answer with 1 rep. One of my main uses for comments is to request extra information in order to be able to provide an answer. I've seen people post requests for clarification as answers, either because they didn't have sufficient rep, or they've got into a bad habit. In this instance, it seems like the privilege limit is having the wrong effect.
It takes 2K rep to be able to edit somebody else's answer / question without requiring it to be approved, which can take a relatively long time. In this question, I answered a question and then Duck answered a different aspect of the question. The OP still had some difficulty understanding the answer. We eventually resolved it through comments on that answer. The preferred behaviour (in my opinion obviously) would have been to edit Duck's answer and put appropriate clarification/examples in it. However, when I've done this in the past because I'm the only one that can see the edit, the OP is none the wiser for an indeterminate period of time. The easy option would be to put the clarification in my answer, since it would be visible immediately but this seems like the wrong behaviour.
From what I understand users with < 3K impose a heavier weight on the moderators (because they can't vote to close posts, they can only flag them), which ironically means it's probably easier to raise your flag weight while you're a new user than it is when you're an experienced one... Again, this seems wrong...
Maybe the balance is such that the privileges provide more protection than detrimental impact (feel free to downvote if you disagree)...
If you do agree it is a problem, is there anything that can be done about it?
Random thoughts include:
- Lower the rep limit for commenting to 10/20 - I'm sure this has probably been discussed in the past and denied.
- Have something like flag weight play into the ability to vote for closing, rather than just rep. It seems like ability to identify bad/off topic posts is different than the ability to ask/answer questions anyway.
- I'm not really sure what could be done about editing control, maybe link it to number of succesfful edits / sportsmanship badge, but this seems overly complex...
Is there anything better out there? Is it an insignificant problem?