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Self answering (what Yakk did, and your post omits) makes a difference. It is directly encouraged in the help center

If you have a question that you already know the answer to, and you would like to document that knowledge in public so that others (including yourself) can find it later, it's perfectly okay to ask and answer your own question on a Stack Exchange site.

This is inline with the SO model being a repository of knowledge and not a plain Q&A site.

And that spirit of sharing is very likely what affected people's perception of it, causing them to hit the button that says "this post is useful".

As for your cheeky question in the title. No, we don't. I doubt Yakk's post would have been received differently if it had been posted by a user with 100 rep.

Self answering (what Yakk did, and your post omits) makes a difference. It is directly encouraged in the help center

If you have a question that you already know the answer to, and you would like to document that knowledge in public so that others (including yourself) can find it later, it's perfectly okay to ask and answer your own question on a Stack Exchange site.

This is inline with the SO model being a repository of knowledge and not a plain Q&A site.

And that spirit of sharing is very likely what affected people's perception of it, causing them to hit the button that says "this post is useful".

Self answering (what Yakk did, and your post omits) makes a difference. It is directly encouraged in the help center

If you have a question that you already know the answer to, and you would like to document that knowledge in public so that others (including yourself) can find it later, it's perfectly okay to ask and answer your own question on a Stack Exchange site.

This is inline with the SO model being a repository of knowledge and not a plain Q&A site.

And that spirit of sharing is very likely what affected people's perception of it, causing them to hit the button that says "this post is useful".

As for your cheeky question in the title. No, we don't. I doubt Yakk's post would have been received differently if it had been posted by a user with 100 rep.

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Self answering (what Yakk did, and your post omits) makes a difference. It is directly encouraged in the help center

If you have a question that you already know the answer to, and you would like to document that knowledge in public so that others (including yourself) can find it later, it's perfectly okay to ask and answer your own question on a Stack Exchange site.

This is inline with the SO model being a repository of knowledge and not a plain Q&A site.

And that spirit of sharing is very likely what affected people's perception of it, causing them to hit the button that says "this post is useful".

Self answering (what Yakk did, and your post omits) makes a difference. It is directly encouraged in the help center

If you have a question that you already know the answer to, and you would like to document that knowledge in public so that others (including yourself) can find it later, it's perfectly okay to ask and answer your own question on a Stack Exchange site.

This is inline with the SO model being a repository of knowledge and not a plain Q&A site.

Self answering (what Yakk did, and your post omits) makes a difference. It is directly encouraged in the help center

If you have a question that you already know the answer to, and you would like to document that knowledge in public so that others (including yourself) can find it later, it's perfectly okay to ask and answer your own question on a Stack Exchange site.

This is inline with the SO model being a repository of knowledge and not a plain Q&A site.

And that spirit of sharing is very likely what affected people's perception of it, causing them to hit the button that says "this post is useful".

Source Link

Self answering (what Yakk did, and your post omits) makes a difference. It is directly encouraged in the help center

If you have a question that you already know the answer to, and you would like to document that knowledge in public so that others (including yourself) can find it later, it's perfectly okay to ask and answer your own question on a Stack Exchange site.

This is inline with the SO model being a repository of knowledge and not a plain Q&A site.