Over on MSE, I've proposed a series of badges for asking well-received questions on separate days. While implementing them on Stack Overflow, where the primary motivation does not apply, we decided to explain why we are also bringing them here. The last thing we want is to create busy work for people by introducing more questions that ought to be closed and/or deleted. There are two important features intended to limit unwanted questions:
Questions themselves are not the unit of measure, but rather days of asking. Plus, days with negatively-scored, closed, or deleted questions are not counted as good asking days even if you do ask a positively-scored question that day.
In order to be eligible, a user can't have a high ratio of negative, closed, or deleted questions on their record.
The second point strongly resembles a narrow version of citizenship level. If you set up good answers, we want you on our team. Do that for enough days and we'll honor your achievement with a badge. But unlike the old accept rate metric, this version enforces a standard level quietly and automatically. It takes the burden of enforcing community standards off the shoulders of people who just want to answer questions. Your vote has a strong influence on whether a user will be eligible for the badge.
Lately, we've been working on ways to warn and slow down people who repeatedly ask poorly received questions. Meanwhile, people like sharptooth have quietly asked a thousand questions, including this little puzzle: Is C++ allowed to increase the derived class size if there're no new member variables compared to the base class? If we are successful in reducing unwanted questions (and we're not done with that work), we'll need more interesting questions to replace them. Our goal shouldn't just be to squash boring questions, but to increase the odds that our top users will find something interesting to answer when they visit Stack Overflow.
One last minute addition we considered, but aren't planning on doing right away is award multiple gold badges. For most sites, that won't add very many:
138 Stack Overflow
7 Mathematics
4 Jewish Life and Learning
2 TeX - LaTeX
2 Science Fiction
2 MathOverflow
2 Gaming
1 Travel
1 Server Fault
1 IT Security
1 English Language and Usage
1 English Language Learners
But because of the potential impact on Stack Overflow, we are going to give the badges some time to soak in. We don't take back badges once they are awarded, as a rule. Even so, we think it would be worthwhile to acknowledge people who have gone above and beyond the already high standard of this gold badge. Should the Socratic badge be awarded multiple times?
(total questions - negative questions - closed - deleted)/total questions >= 0.5