Over the last few years I've been seeing more and more cases of users fishing for high rep by answering simple questions that are either duplicates or that the OP did not put any effort into researching how to solve the problem.
Since a lot of these questions are for very simple problems, they get a lot of traffic and a lot of votes. Some really simple things that are answered over and over had 100s and in some cases 1000s of votes up, this seems to encourage users to post low quality and duplicate questions and answers over and over to gain rep.
I would like to suggest a few possible solutions that may help (each by itself or all together):
These will probably hurt everyone's rep-points somewhat, but quality should matter more than your points do.
Give a penalty for posting questions that are obvious duplicate (i.e. related question in list is voted as reason for duplication), this should not be returned on deletion of question. Why: encourage users to check for duplicates. How: save list of related at time of post, check if close vote includes a link from there.
Give a penalty for answers to questions with no attempt in them by OP to solve alone, this should not be returned on deletion of answer. Why: discourage users from answering for rep without filtering for quality.
Reduce rep gained from an answers to zero (if higher) if question is closed. Why: discourage users from answering for rep without filtering for quality.
Award less rep to questions where OP did not link to related questions or documentation. Why: encourage users to post high quality questions.
Award more rep to "hard" questions and answers than "easy" questions and answers e.g. in inverse to popularity of tags. E.g. a scale of rep between 2 and 20. Why: try to reduce rep mining on questions that can be answered easily by looking at the documentation and reward answers to complex problems. How: a. statistics algorithm like tf-idf, b. answer frequency, if multiple answers posted quickly, it's easy.
Cap reputation at 20 per post. (Yes, even for my posts!) Why: popular questions aren't better, they are just for more used topics.
foo
is null"? Why would anyone bother writing the former instead of 100 of the latter?