Skip to main content
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

I just stumbled across an answeran answer and happened to click through to the user's profile, and what I saw surprised me somewhat. The answer is to a fairly basic JavaScript question which obviously quite a lot of people have found useful. It's got quite a lot of upvotes (4377) currently which isn't overly surprising in itself. What is surprising is the affect that this has had on this individuals reputation.

I should note at this point, I don't want to necessarily focus on this user, it's more about the principle.

With fairly few answers/questions (31 in total) this user has a massive reputation, full access to all the reputation gained moderator tools, etc. with actually quite a small contribution to the community. This makes me feel like there's something broken. I'm not sure a single question/answer should be able to drive so much reputation and made me wonder if there should be a cap on the reputation that can be gained from a single question.

Normally I find high voted answers tend to get turned into a community wiki, but with this being such a simple answer I guess it's not really warranted much editing.

I just stumbled across an answer and happened to click through to the user's profile, and what I saw surprised me somewhat. The answer is to a fairly basic JavaScript question which obviously quite a lot of people have found useful. It's got quite a lot of upvotes (4377) currently which isn't overly surprising in itself. What is surprising is the affect that this has had on this individuals reputation.

I should note at this point, I don't want to necessarily focus on this user, it's more about the principle.

With fairly few answers/questions (31 in total) this user has a massive reputation, full access to all the reputation gained moderator tools, etc. with actually quite a small contribution to the community. This makes me feel like there's something broken. I'm not sure a single question/answer should be able to drive so much reputation and made me wonder if there should be a cap on the reputation that can be gained from a single question.

Normally I find high voted answers tend to get turned into a community wiki, but with this being such a simple answer I guess it's not really warranted much editing.

I just stumbled across an answer and happened to click through to the user's profile, and what I saw surprised me somewhat. The answer is to a fairly basic JavaScript question which obviously quite a lot of people have found useful. It's got quite a lot of upvotes (4377) currently which isn't overly surprising in itself. What is surprising is the affect that this has had on this individuals reputation.

I should note at this point, I don't want to necessarily focus on this user, it's more about the principle.

With fairly few answers/questions (31 in total) this user has a massive reputation, full access to all the reputation gained moderator tools, etc. with actually quite a small contribution to the community. This makes me feel like there's something broken. I'm not sure a single question/answer should be able to drive so much reputation and made me wonder if there should be a cap on the reputation that can be gained from a single question.

Normally I find high voted answers tend to get turned into a community wiki, but with this being such a simple answer I guess it's not really warranted much editing.

Copy edited. More representative link text.
Source Link
Peter Mortensen
  • 31.6k
  • 4
  • 22
  • 14

I just stumbled across an answeran answer and happened to click through to the usersuser's profile, and what I saw surprised me somewhat. The answer is to a fairly basic JavaScript question which obviously quite a lot of people have found useful. It's got quite a lot of upvotes (4377) currently which isn't overly suprisingsurprising in itself. What is surprising is the affect that this has had on this individuals reputation.

I should note at this point, I don't want to necessarily focus on this user, it's more about the principle.

With fairly few answers/questions (31 in total) this user has a massive reputation, full access to all the reputation gained moderator tools, etc. with actually quite a small contribution to the community. This makes me feel like there's something broken. I'm not sure a single question/answer should be able to drive so much reputation and made me wonder if there should be a cap on the reputation that can be gained from a single question.

Normally I find high voted answers tend to get turned into a community wiki, but with this being such a simple answer I guess it's not really warranted much editing.

I just stumbled across an answer and happened to click through to the users profile, and what I saw surprised me somewhat. The answer is to a fairly basic JavaScript question which obviously quite a lot of people have found useful. It's got quite a lot of upvotes (4377) currently which isn't overly suprising in itself. What is surprising is the affect that this has had on this individuals reputation.

I should note at this point, I don't want to necessarily focus on this user, it's more about the principle.

With fairly few answers/questions (31 in total) this user has a massive reputation, full access to all the reputation gained moderator tools etc with actually quite a small contribution to the community. This makes me feel like there's something broken. I'm not sure a single question/answer should be able to drive so much reputation and made me wonder if there should be a cap on the reputation that can be gained from a single question.

Normally I find high voted answers tend to get turned into a community wiki, but with this being such a simple answer I guess it's not really warranted much editing.

I just stumbled across an answer and happened to click through to the user's profile, and what I saw surprised me somewhat. The answer is to a fairly basic JavaScript question which obviously quite a lot of people have found useful. It's got quite a lot of upvotes (4377) currently which isn't overly surprising in itself. What is surprising is the affect that this has had on this individuals reputation.

I should note at this point, I don't want to necessarily focus on this user, it's more about the principle.

With fairly few answers/questions (31 in total) this user has a massive reputation, full access to all the reputation gained moderator tools, etc. with actually quite a small contribution to the community. This makes me feel like there's something broken. I'm not sure a single question/answer should be able to drive so much reputation and made me wonder if there should be a cap on the reputation that can be gained from a single question.

Normally I find high voted answers tend to get turned into a community wiki, but with this being such a simple answer I guess it's not really warranted much editing.

Post Closed as "Duplicate" by gnat, CommunityBot
Source Link
Ian
  • 34.5k
  • 19
  • 15

Reputation limit per question?

I just stumbled across an answer and happened to click through to the users profile, and what I saw surprised me somewhat. The answer is to a fairly basic JavaScript question which obviously quite a lot of people have found useful. It's got quite a lot of upvotes (4377) currently which isn't overly suprising in itself. What is surprising is the affect that this has had on this individuals reputation.

I should note at this point, I don't want to necessarily focus on this user, it's more about the principle.

With fairly few answers/questions (31 in total) this user has a massive reputation, full access to all the reputation gained moderator tools etc with actually quite a small contribution to the community. This makes me feel like there's something broken. I'm not sure a single question/answer should be able to drive so much reputation and made me wonder if there should be a cap on the reputation that can be gained from a single question.

Normally I find high voted answers tend to get turned into a community wiki, but with this being such a simple answer I guess it's not really warranted much editing.