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The main way I know that it affects my behavior is that I don't leave comments when I down vote anything by a user who also has enough rep to down vote. I do find myself checking their profile and recent activity if a high rep user does something like post a blatant recommendation request.

The only thing (I'm aware of) that makes me less likely to flag is unfamiliarity with the technology/language and task. It's harder to be sure the provided code is a proper MCVE, for example.


  

To address the main question, "what one needs to do in order to not be impacted by what I call the reputation-bias?", you could use that script to hide that informationthat script to hide that information if it's a serious problem.

You could try doing a focused read of the question instead of scanning the page first but seeing someone's rep before you've formed an opinion of the question is a habit, that'll probably be hard to break.

But I think the, "imagine you're talking to a busy co-worker" advice the site gives to Askers can help Answerers here too. If you were busy and this question came from a co-worker with decent/good skill level, how would you react? Would you have to put them off until you had more time to answer it? It's probably too broad. Would your answer be different if you worked at a different company? Probably opinion based. Did someone else ask you this yesterday? It's a duplicate.

You can also try flipping your internal script. Would you hesitate to flag a post if the user had 5 instead of 5K rep? Would you really think this question were OK if the user had 5K instead of just 5 rep?

In trying to be fair to new users, remember that the new user whose question you're looking at is not the same new user who yelled at you when you tried to help them. They are not affiliated in any way. They just happen to also be new.

In trying not to be too generous to high rep users, remember that they've already got a ton of rep. A -2 isn't going to sink them and if anyone should have been able to tell that their question was off topic, it's them.

It'll probably slow you down at first, because you have to deliberately interrupt and interrogate the bias, but hopefully it'll just become a habit.


  

Seeing a user with more rep than you be a jerk also helps take the shine off, but I don't recommend it.

The main way I know that it affects my behavior is that I don't leave comments when I down vote anything by a user who also has enough rep to down vote. I do find myself checking their profile and recent activity if a high rep user does something like post a blatant recommendation request.

The only thing (I'm aware of) that makes me less likely to flag is unfamiliarity with the technology/language and task. It's harder to be sure the provided code is a proper MCVE, for example.


 

To address the main question, "what one needs to do in order to not be impacted by what I call the reputation-bias?", you could use that script to hide that information if it's a serious problem.

You could try doing a focused read of the question instead of scanning the page first but seeing someone's rep before you've formed an opinion of the question is a habit, that'll probably be hard to break.

But I think the, "imagine you're talking to a busy co-worker" advice the site gives to Askers can help Answerers here too. If you were busy and this question came from a co-worker with decent/good skill level, how would you react? Would you have to put them off until you had more time to answer it? It's probably too broad. Would your answer be different if you worked at a different company? Probably opinion based. Did someone else ask you this yesterday? It's a duplicate.

You can also try flipping your internal script. Would you hesitate to flag a post if the user had 5 instead of 5K rep? Would you really think this question were OK if the user had 5K instead of just 5 rep?

In trying to be fair to new users, remember that the new user whose question you're looking at is not the same new user who yelled at you when you tried to help them. They are not affiliated in any way. They just happen to also be new.

In trying not to be too generous to high rep users, remember that they've already got a ton of rep. A -2 isn't going to sink them and if anyone should have been able to tell that their question was off topic, it's them.

It'll probably slow you down at first, because you have to deliberately interrupt and interrogate the bias, but hopefully it'll just become a habit.


 

Seeing a user with more rep than you be a jerk also helps take the shine off, but I don't recommend it.

The main way I know that it affects my behavior is that I don't leave comments when I down vote anything by a user who also has enough rep to down vote. I do find myself checking their profile and recent activity if a high rep user does something like post a blatant recommendation request.

The only thing (I'm aware of) that makes me less likely to flag is unfamiliarity with the technology/language and task. It's harder to be sure the provided code is a proper MCVE, for example.

 

To address the main question, "what one needs to do in order to not be impacted by what I call the reputation-bias?", you could use that script to hide that information if it's a serious problem.

You could try doing a focused read of the question instead of scanning the page first but seeing someone's rep before you've formed an opinion of the question is a habit, that'll probably be hard to break.

But I think the, "imagine you're talking to a busy co-worker" advice the site gives to Askers can help Answerers here too. If you were busy and this question came from a co-worker with decent/good skill level, how would you react? Would you have to put them off until you had more time to answer it? It's probably too broad. Would your answer be different if you worked at a different company? Probably opinion based. Did someone else ask you this yesterday? It's a duplicate.

You can also try flipping your internal script. Would you hesitate to flag a post if the user had 5 instead of 5K rep? Would you really think this question were OK if the user had 5K instead of just 5 rep?

In trying to be fair to new users, remember that the new user whose question you're looking at is not the same new user who yelled at you when you tried to help them. They are not affiliated in any way. They just happen to also be new.

In trying not to be too generous to high rep users, remember that they've already got a ton of rep. A -2 isn't going to sink them and if anyone should have been able to tell that their question was off topic, it's them.

It'll probably slow you down at first, because you have to deliberately interrupt and interrogate the bias, but hopefully it'll just become a habit.

 

Seeing a user with more rep than you be a jerk also helps take the shine off, but I don't recommend it.

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BSMP
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The main way I know that it affects my behavior is that I don't leave comments when I down vote anything by a user who also has enough rep to down vote. I do find myself checking their profile and recent activity if a high rep user does something like post a blatant recommendation request.

The only thing (I'm aware of) that makes me less likely to flag is unfamiliarity with the technology/language and task. It's harder to be sure the provided code is a proper MCVE, for example.


To address the main question, "what one needs to do in order to not be impacted by what I call the reputation-bias?", you could use that script to hide that information if it's a serious problem.

You could try doing a focused read of the question instead of scanning the page first but seeing someone's rep before you've formed an opinion of the question is a habit, that'll probably be hard to break.

But I think the, "imagine you're talking to a busy co-worker" advice the site gives to Askers can help Answerers here too. If you were busy and this question came from a co-worker with decent/good skill level, how would you react? Would you have to put them off until you had more time to answer it? It's probably too broad. Would your answer be different if you worked at a different company? Probably opinion based. Did someone else ask you this yesterday? It's a duplicate.

You can also try flipping your internal script. Would you hesitate to flag a post if the user had 5 instead of 5K rep? Would you really think this question were OK if the user had 5K instead of just 5 rep?

In trying to be fair to new users, remember that the new user whose question you're looking at is not the same new user who yelled at you when you tried to help them. They are not affiliated in any way. They just happen to also be new.

In trying not to be too generous to high rep users, remember that they've already got a ton of rep. A -2 isn't going to sink them and if anyone should have been able to tell that their question was off topic, it's them.

It'll probably slow you down at first, because you have to deliberately interrupt and interrogate the bias, but hopefully it'll just become a habit.


Seeing a user with more rep than you be a jerk also helps take the shine off, but I don't recommend it.

The main way I know that it affects my behavior is that I don't leave comments when I down vote anything by a user who also has enough rep to down vote. I do find myself checking their profile and recent activity if a high rep user does something like post a blatant recommendation request.

The only thing (I'm aware of) that makes me less likely to flag is unfamiliarity with the technology/language and task. It's harder to be sure the provided code is a proper MCVE, for example.


To address the main question, "what one needs to do in order to not be impacted by what I call the reputation-bias?", you could use that script to hide that information if it's a serious problem.

You could try doing a focused read of the question instead of scanning the page first but seeing someone's rep before you've formed an opinion of the question is a habit, that'll probably be hard to break.

But I think the, "imagine you're talking to a busy co-worker" advice the site gives to Askers can help Answerers here too. If you were busy and this question came from a co-worker with decent/good skill level, how would you react? Would you have to put them off until you had more time to answer it? It's probably too broad. Would your answer be different if you worked at a different company? Probably opinion based. Did someone else ask you this yesterday? It's a duplicate.

You can also try flipping your internal script. Would you hesitate to flag a post if the user had 5 instead of 5K rep? Would you really think this question were OK if the user had 5K instead of just 5 rep?

In trying to be fair to new users, remember that the new user whose question you're looking at is not the same new user who yelled at you when you tried to help them. They are not affiliated in any way. They just happen to also be new.

In trying not to be too generous to high rep users, remember that they've already got a ton of rep. A -2 isn't going to sink them and if anyone should have been able to tell that their question was off topic, it's them.

It'll probably slow you down at first, because you have to deliberately interrupt and interrogate the bias, but hopefully it'll just become a habit.

The main way I know that it affects my behavior is that I don't leave comments when I down vote anything by a user who also has enough rep to down vote. I do find myself checking their profile and recent activity if a high rep user does something like post a blatant recommendation request.

The only thing (I'm aware of) that makes me less likely to flag is unfamiliarity with the technology/language and task. It's harder to be sure the provided code is a proper MCVE, for example.


To address the main question, "what one needs to do in order to not be impacted by what I call the reputation-bias?", you could use that script to hide that information if it's a serious problem.

You could try doing a focused read of the question instead of scanning the page first but seeing someone's rep before you've formed an opinion of the question is a habit, that'll probably be hard to break.

But I think the, "imagine you're talking to a busy co-worker" advice the site gives to Askers can help Answerers here too. If you were busy and this question came from a co-worker with decent/good skill level, how would you react? Would you have to put them off until you had more time to answer it? It's probably too broad. Would your answer be different if you worked at a different company? Probably opinion based. Did someone else ask you this yesterday? It's a duplicate.

You can also try flipping your internal script. Would you hesitate to flag a post if the user had 5 instead of 5K rep? Would you really think this question were OK if the user had 5K instead of just 5 rep?

In trying to be fair to new users, remember that the new user whose question you're looking at is not the same new user who yelled at you when you tried to help them. They are not affiliated in any way. They just happen to also be new.

In trying not to be too generous to high rep users, remember that they've already got a ton of rep. A -2 isn't going to sink them and if anyone should have been able to tell that their question was off topic, it's them.

It'll probably slow you down at first, because you have to deliberately interrupt and interrogate the bias, but hopefully it'll just become a habit.


Seeing a user with more rep than you be a jerk also helps take the shine off, but I don't recommend it.

Expanded answer to include the (new?) main question
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BSMP
  • 4.8k
  • 10
  • 88
  • 109

The main way I know that it affects my behavior is that I don't leave comments when I down vote anything by a user who also has enough rep to down vote. I do find myself checking their profile and recent activity if a high rep user does something like post a blatant recommendation request.

The only thing (I'm aware of) that makes me less likely to flag is unfamiliarity with the technology/language and task. It's harder to be sure the provided code is a proper MCVE, for example.


To address the main question, "what one needs to do in order to not be impacted by what I call the reputation-bias?", you could use that script to hide that information if it's a serious problem.

You could try doing a focused read of the question instead of scanning the page first but seeing someone's rep before you've formed an opinion of the question is a habit, that'll probably be hard to break.

But I think the, "imagine you're talking to a busy co-worker" advice the site gives to Askers can help Answerers here too. If you were busy and this question came from a co-worker with decent/good skill level, how would you react? Would you have to put them off until you had more time to answer it? It's probably too broad. Would your answer be different if you worked at a different company? Probably opinion based. Did someone else ask you this yesterday? It's a duplicate.

You can also try flipping your internal script. Would you hesitate to flag a post if the user had 5 instead of 5K rep? Would you really think this question were OK if the user had 5K instead of just 5 rep?

In trying to be fair to new users, remember that the new user whose question you're looking at is not the same new user who yelled at you when you tried to help them. They are not affiliated in any way. They just happen to also be new.

In trying not to be too generous to high rep users, remember that they've already got a ton of rep. A -2 isn't going to sink them and if anyone should have been able to tell that their question was off topic, it's them.

It'll probably slow you down at first, because you have to deliberately interrupt and interrogate the bias, but hopefully it'll just become a habit.

The main way I know that it affects my behavior is that I don't leave comments when I down vote anything by a user who also has enough rep to down vote. I do find myself checking their profile and recent activity if a high rep user does something like post a blatant recommendation request.

The only thing (I'm aware of) that makes me less likely to flag is unfamiliarity with the technology/language and task. It's harder to be sure the provided code is a proper MCVE, for example.

The main way I know that it affects my behavior is that I don't leave comments when I down vote anything by a user who also has enough rep to down vote. I do find myself checking their profile and recent activity if a high rep user does something like post a blatant recommendation request.

The only thing (I'm aware of) that makes me less likely to flag is unfamiliarity with the technology/language and task. It's harder to be sure the provided code is a proper MCVE, for example.


To address the main question, "what one needs to do in order to not be impacted by what I call the reputation-bias?", you could use that script to hide that information if it's a serious problem.

You could try doing a focused read of the question instead of scanning the page first but seeing someone's rep before you've formed an opinion of the question is a habit, that'll probably be hard to break.

But I think the, "imagine you're talking to a busy co-worker" advice the site gives to Askers can help Answerers here too. If you were busy and this question came from a co-worker with decent/good skill level, how would you react? Would you have to put them off until you had more time to answer it? It's probably too broad. Would your answer be different if you worked at a different company? Probably opinion based. Did someone else ask you this yesterday? It's a duplicate.

You can also try flipping your internal script. Would you hesitate to flag a post if the user had 5 instead of 5K rep? Would you really think this question were OK if the user had 5K instead of just 5 rep?

In trying to be fair to new users, remember that the new user whose question you're looking at is not the same new user who yelled at you when you tried to help them. They are not affiliated in any way. They just happen to also be new.

In trying not to be too generous to high rep users, remember that they've already got a ton of rep. A -2 isn't going to sink them and if anyone should have been able to tell that their question was off topic, it's them.

It'll probably slow you down at first, because you have to deliberately interrupt and interrogate the bias, but hopefully it'll just become a habit.

Source Link
BSMP
  • 4.8k
  • 10
  • 88
  • 109
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