I've been thinking about the reputation system, and I believe it is a bit flawed. That's probably not a surprise for anyone that a given system is not perfect, and even though I don't have a proper solution, I believe I have a kind of direction to follow.
What I feel is flawed
The reasoning behind this is the quality of questions and answers of the overall Stack Overflow... database (not sure that's the word I'm looking for, feel free to edit). I often see great answers with a few votes, and bad answers marked as the accepted answer. That's most certainly a problem many of you have witnessed countless times. And to be honest I don't even think there should be an "Accepted" option, but that's another issue for another time (or is it?).
The good thing is the reputation system allows you to judge the quality of an answer if you are completely unable to do it any other way. I remember the days I was really bad at programming, and out of two working answers, I would blindly take the one from the highest reputation poster. But that's not the case for everyone, and even worse, you never know who votes. That's the core of the problem.
A bad answer (only talking about answers here, questions can be bad but should be edited or deleted altogether, in a way that there should never be any bad questions in the end) can be good for a novice user; he sees code, copy pastes, and it ends up working. It's working hence it's good. And then some other novice with the same level of knowledge votes it up, which makes it even more reliable. But it's still a bad answer, the expert knows it and votes it down. We could even argue there are fewer experts than novices on Stack Overflow, and we're left with a potentially bad answer with higher votes than the good answer. Again, I'm sure we've all seen "this should be the accepted answer" comments.
This is where the problem lies, I believe, is in the quality of the vote. We're not all equal on Stack Overflow, and a higher reputation should give a stronger balance in the score of an answer.
The idea
(which you most probably have guessed by now)
Simply put, a complete revamp of the scoring system could maybe fix this. Someone with a reputation of 1 has very little strength in the score of a question, while Jon Skeet pretty much crushes everyone with his opinion.
Question scores wouldn't be like it is now, +1s & -1s calculated together; it'd still be the same idea, "agree" vs "disagree" or "good" vs "bad", but the score shown would be very different.
What I have in mind is bad on reputation per tag, and apply that value to the answer score. There is need for improvement, as someone with 20k in a domain is definitely very good and most probably above average. There is less reason for that person to be less valuable than someone with 50k, even though there is a lot of reasons to value someone that has 100 vs 20K. So it's not only about the difference, but maybe about some average levels or caps you can hit. Maybe base it on the average of the Stack Overflow user base, or maybe base it on arbitrary numbers, like 1k - 2k users have the same strength, but once you reach 3k you've more influence? I don't know.
All I feel is, a bad answer upvoted by 100 novices should be able to be downvoted by a single experienced developer in the domain. But five experienced developers could still have the chance to argue vs one very experienced developer. Again, arbitrary numbers for the sake of the example.
There are some problems that rise using a system like this one
- Are previous votes influenced by my reputation gain?
I don't think they should; when you voted you had that experience, maybe now you'd even disagree with yourself (we all do!)
- [Adding problems here as people participate]
Conclusion
I'm sure you've all got the idea; I'm doing my best to explain it, and I agree, the solution is clearly not set in stone in this post. But I strongly feel that the current system is a bit flawed and that something oriented around the above idea fixes those flaws.