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I would favor to just recognize two different aspects of points/abilites/rights whatever as I posted here: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/272388/why-is-the-point-system-not-separated-from-the-rights-issues-on-different-stackehttps://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/272388/why-is-the-point-system-not-separated-from-the-rights-issues-on-different-stacke

If one has some reputation somewhere else he does not only have those points, e.g. 10K whatever. But he also has some kind of "rights" or "proven abilities" with it. E.g. beeing able to seriously comment, edit and so on.

As a reader I can currently clearly see, how many points some answerer/commenter has which may be a hint of how experienced he is in the area of expertise. So they could be different on the various sites.

But to not scare of "trusted" members on one site we should hang the barrier much lower, to encourage them to participate with high quality and no "artificial" obstacles on other sites on the other hand.

I mean here we deal with programmers, db/system administrators or general IT-folks mostly(!). A lot know a little, but enough from everything and many are able to quickly go to the details with debugging, googleing and so on. I would normally not consider myself an "expert" in many IT-things I do, because in the real world, to be an expert with a tool, means often you have some years of experience with it, have certifications and so on. In the programming world this paradigm can't hold. You have thousands of options to go for a solution (Java, PHP, Bash, Perl, PL/SQL ... whatever). If you are experienced in one, you know the others in a way. If you know a lot about one language in certain areas and quite some depth, there is still the rest of the iceberg that you now little about. It doesn't matter and you could be still considered an expert in a way or the other.

At the end we need to solve problems or find solutions quick, efficient, effective and hopefully with a lot of fun.

So please encourage fun and lessen frustration!

(Let the point-collectors have fun, but please don't force people into the stackexchange "value system" where the real-world values may be somewhere else.)

update: so 200 points to be able to edit everywhere is much too high ... even I don't have it right now although I was fairly active for somebody not interested in getting points.

I would favor to just recognize two different aspects of points/abilites/rights whatever as I posted here: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/272388/why-is-the-point-system-not-separated-from-the-rights-issues-on-different-stacke

If one has some reputation somewhere else he does not only have those points, e.g. 10K whatever. But he also has some kind of "rights" or "proven abilities" with it. E.g. beeing able to seriously comment, edit and so on.

As a reader I can currently clearly see, how many points some answerer/commenter has which may be a hint of how experienced he is in the area of expertise. So they could be different on the various sites.

But to not scare of "trusted" members on one site we should hang the barrier much lower, to encourage them to participate with high quality and no "artificial" obstacles on other sites on the other hand.

I mean here we deal with programmers, db/system administrators or general IT-folks mostly(!). A lot know a little, but enough from everything and many are able to quickly go to the details with debugging, googleing and so on. I would normally not consider myself an "expert" in many IT-things I do, because in the real world, to be an expert with a tool, means often you have some years of experience with it, have certifications and so on. In the programming world this paradigm can't hold. You have thousands of options to go for a solution (Java, PHP, Bash, Perl, PL/SQL ... whatever). If you are experienced in one, you know the others in a way. If you know a lot about one language in certain areas and quite some depth, there is still the rest of the iceberg that you now little about. It doesn't matter and you could be still considered an expert in a way or the other.

At the end we need to solve problems or find solutions quick, efficient, effective and hopefully with a lot of fun.

So please encourage fun and lessen frustration!

(Let the point-collectors have fun, but please don't force people into the stackexchange "value system" where the real-world values may be somewhere else.)

update: so 200 points to be able to edit everywhere is much too high ... even I don't have it right now although I was fairly active for somebody not interested in getting points.

I would favor to just recognize two different aspects of points/abilites/rights whatever as I posted here: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/272388/why-is-the-point-system-not-separated-from-the-rights-issues-on-different-stacke

If one has some reputation somewhere else he does not only have those points, e.g. 10K whatever. But he also has some kind of "rights" or "proven abilities" with it. E.g. beeing able to seriously comment, edit and so on.

As a reader I can currently clearly see, how many points some answerer/commenter has which may be a hint of how experienced he is in the area of expertise. So they could be different on the various sites.

But to not scare of "trusted" members on one site we should hang the barrier much lower, to encourage them to participate with high quality and no "artificial" obstacles on other sites on the other hand.

I mean here we deal with programmers, db/system administrators or general IT-folks mostly(!). A lot know a little, but enough from everything and many are able to quickly go to the details with debugging, googleing and so on. I would normally not consider myself an "expert" in many IT-things I do, because in the real world, to be an expert with a tool, means often you have some years of experience with it, have certifications and so on. In the programming world this paradigm can't hold. You have thousands of options to go for a solution (Java, PHP, Bash, Perl, PL/SQL ... whatever). If you are experienced in one, you know the others in a way. If you know a lot about one language in certain areas and quite some depth, there is still the rest of the iceberg that you now little about. It doesn't matter and you could be still considered an expert in a way or the other.

At the end we need to solve problems or find solutions quick, efficient, effective and hopefully with a lot of fun.

So please encourage fun and lessen frustration!

(Let the point-collectors have fun, but please don't force people into the stackexchange "value system" where the real-world values may be somewhere else.)

update: so 200 points to be able to edit everywhere is much too high ... even I don't have it right now although I was fairly active for somebody not interested in getting points.

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I would favor to just recognize two different aspects of points/abilites/rights whatever as I posted here: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/272388/why-is-the-point-system-not-separated-from-the-rights-issues-on-different-stacke

If one has some reputation somewhere else he does not only have those points, e.g. 10K whatever. But he also has some kind of "rights" or "proven abilities" with it. E.g. beeing able to seriously comment, edit and so on.

As a reader I can currently clearly see, how many points some answerer/commenter has which may be a hint of how experienced he is in the area of expertise. So they could be different on the various sites.

But to not scare of "trusted" members on one site we should hang the barrier much lower, to encourage them to participate with high quality and no "artificial" obstacles on other sites on the other hand.

I mean here we deal with programmers, db/system administrators or general IT-folks mostly(!). A lot know a little, but enough from everything and many are able to quickly go to the details with debugging, googleing and so on. I would normally not consider myself an "expert" in many IT-things I do, because in the real world, to be an expert with a tool, means often you have some years of experience with it, have certifications and so on. In the programming world this paradigm can't hold. You have thousands of options to go for a solution (Java, PHP, Bash, Perl, PL/SQL ... whatever). If you are experienced in one, you know the others in a way. If you know a lot about one language in certain areas and quite some depth, there is still the rest of the iceberg that you now little about. It doesn't matter and you could be still considered an expert in a way or the other.

At the end we need to solve problems or find solutions quick, efficient, effective and hopefully with a lot of fun.

So please encourage fun and lessen frustration!

(Let the point-collectors have fun, but please don't force people into the stackexchange "value system" where the real-world values may be somewhere else.)

update: so 200 points to be able to edit everywhere is much too high ... even I don't have it right now although I was fairly active for somebody not interested in getting points.