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As mentioned in Michael Mrozek'sMichael Mrozek's answer to the related question on MSE, Badges should reward positive behaviorBadges should reward positive behavior, badges always meet one of 2 criteria:

  1. Encourage positive behavior.
  2. Compensation.

I would also add as 3rd criteria that badges also exist to educate users about features of the site, which is somewhat part of the encouraging positive behavior.

The Peer Pressure badge exists solely for Encouragement and Education. We like it when someone learns the ability to recognize that their post does not meet the site's criteria and deletes it themselves. This is positive behavior because it saves the community and the moderators the effort of having to delete it themselves. There is also an educational aspect because not everyone is familiar with how deletion works, or that you will recover your lost rep when you delete your downvoted post.

There are always going to be users who intentionally post a bad question just to get the badge. However, that can easily backfire because if someone posts an answer that gets upvoted, then the user will be unable to delete it and won't recover the rep and won't get the badge. Of course this won't stop anyone who wants to post a bad answer and delete it when it gets 3 downvotes (unless it gets accepted, which would be extremely unlikely). But in the end, it's a self-cleaning issue as the user will get his/her badge, and the post will be deleted.

As mentioned in Michael Mrozek's answer to the related question on MSE, Badges should reward positive behavior, badges always meet one of 2 criteria:

  1. Encourage positive behavior.
  2. Compensation.

I would also add as 3rd criteria that badges also exist to educate users about features of the site, which is somewhat part of the encouraging positive behavior.

The Peer Pressure badge exists solely for Encouragement and Education. We like it when someone learns the ability to recognize that their post does not meet the site's criteria and deletes it themselves. This is positive behavior because it saves the community and the moderators the effort of having to delete it themselves. There is also an educational aspect because not everyone is familiar with how deletion works, or that you will recover your lost rep when you delete your downvoted post.

There are always going to be users who intentionally post a bad question just to get the badge. However, that can easily backfire because if someone posts an answer that gets upvoted, then the user will be unable to delete it and won't recover the rep and won't get the badge. Of course this won't stop anyone who wants to post a bad answer and delete it when it gets 3 downvotes (unless it gets accepted, which would be extremely unlikely). But in the end, it's a self-cleaning issue as the user will get his/her badge, and the post will be deleted.

As mentioned in Michael Mrozek's answer to the related question on MSE, Badges should reward positive behavior, badges always meet one of 2 criteria:

  1. Encourage positive behavior.
  2. Compensation.

I would also add as 3rd criteria that badges also exist to educate users about features of the site, which is somewhat part of the encouraging positive behavior.

The Peer Pressure badge exists solely for Encouragement and Education. We like it when someone learns the ability to recognize that their post does not meet the site's criteria and deletes it themselves. This is positive behavior because it saves the community and the moderators the effort of having to delete it themselves. There is also an educational aspect because not everyone is familiar with how deletion works, or that you will recover your lost rep when you delete your downvoted post.

There are always going to be users who intentionally post a bad question just to get the badge. However, that can easily backfire because if someone posts an answer that gets upvoted, then the user will be unable to delete it and won't recover the rep and won't get the badge. Of course this won't stop anyone who wants to post a bad answer and delete it when it gets 3 downvotes (unless it gets accepted, which would be extremely unlikely). But in the end, it's a self-cleaning issue as the user will get his/her badge, and the post will be deleted.

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psubsee2003
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As mentioned in Michael Mrozek's answer to the related question on MSE, Badges should reward positive behavior, badges always meet one of 2 criteria:

  1. Encourage positive behavior.
  2. Compensation.

I would also add as 3rd criteria that badges also exist to educate users about features of the site, which is somewhat part of the encouraging positive behavior.

The Peer Pressure badge exists solely for Encouragement and Education. We like it when someone learns the ability to recognize that their post does not meet the site's criteria and deletes it themselves. This is positive behavior because it saves the community and the moderators the effort of having to delete it themselves. There is also an educational aspect because not everyone is familiar with how deletion works, or that you will recover your lost rep when you delete your downvoted post.

There are always going to be users who intentionally post a bad question just to get the badge. However, that can easily backfire because if someone posts an answer that gets upvoted, then the user will be unable to delete it and won't recover the rep and won't get the badge. Of course this won't stop anyone who wants to post a bad answer and delete it when it gets 3 downvotes (unless it gets accepted, which would be extremely unlikely). But in the end, it's a self-cleaning issue as the user will get his/her badge, and the post will be deleted.

As mentioned in Michael Mrozek's answer to the related question on MSE, Badges should reward positive behavior, badges always meet one of 2 criteria:

  1. Encourage positive behavior.
  2. Compensation.

I would also add as 3rd criteria that badges also exist to educate users about features of the site, which is somewhat part of the encouraging positive behavior.

The Peer Pressure badge exists solely for Encouragement and Education. We like it when someone learns the ability to recognize that their post does not meet the site's criteria and deletes it themselves. This is positive behavior because it saves the community and the moderators the effort of having to delete it themselves. There is also an educational aspect because not everyone is familiar with how deletion works, or that you will recover your lost rep when you delete your downvoted post.

There are always going to be users who intentionally post a bad question just to get the badge. However, that can easily backfire because if someone posts an answer that gets upvoted, then the user will be unable to delete it and won't recover the rep and won't get the badge.

As mentioned in Michael Mrozek's answer to the related question on MSE, Badges should reward positive behavior, badges always meet one of 2 criteria:

  1. Encourage positive behavior.
  2. Compensation.

I would also add as 3rd criteria that badges also exist to educate users about features of the site, which is somewhat part of the encouraging positive behavior.

The Peer Pressure badge exists solely for Encouragement and Education. We like it when someone learns the ability to recognize that their post does not meet the site's criteria and deletes it themselves. This is positive behavior because it saves the community and the moderators the effort of having to delete it themselves. There is also an educational aspect because not everyone is familiar with how deletion works, or that you will recover your lost rep when you delete your downvoted post.

There are always going to be users who intentionally post a bad question just to get the badge. However, that can easily backfire because if someone posts an answer that gets upvoted, then the user will be unable to delete it and won't recover the rep and won't get the badge. Of course this won't stop anyone who wants to post a bad answer and delete it when it gets 3 downvotes (unless it gets accepted, which would be extremely unlikely). But in the end, it's a self-cleaning issue as the user will get his/her badge, and the post will be deleted.

Source Link
psubsee2003
  • 8.7k
  • 16
  • 170
  • 168

As mentioned in Michael Mrozek's answer to the related question on MSE, Badges should reward positive behavior, badges always meet one of 2 criteria:

  1. Encourage positive behavior.
  2. Compensation.

I would also add as 3rd criteria that badges also exist to educate users about features of the site, which is somewhat part of the encouraging positive behavior.

The Peer Pressure badge exists solely for Encouragement and Education. We like it when someone learns the ability to recognize that their post does not meet the site's criteria and deletes it themselves. This is positive behavior because it saves the community and the moderators the effort of having to delete it themselves. There is also an educational aspect because not everyone is familiar with how deletion works, or that you will recover your lost rep when you delete your downvoted post.

There are always going to be users who intentionally post a bad question just to get the badge. However, that can easily backfire because if someone posts an answer that gets upvoted, then the user will be unable to delete it and won't recover the rep and won't get the badge.