Today I got the Unsung Hero badge. First, I thought: "Progress! Second gold badge!". Then I understood that it is given for 10 zero voted accepted answers.
Should one avoid getting this badge? Is it shameful?
Today I got the Unsung Hero badge. First, I thought: "Progress! Second gold badge!". Then I understood that it is given for 10 zero voted accepted answers.
Should one avoid getting this badge? Is it shameful?
If you spend your time answering questions in low traffic tags from 1-rep users (who can't upvote) it is entirely possible to have good answers that do not get any upvotes. That is the purpose of the badge - to offer some reward for users who spend a lot of time in low traffic tags.
However, if you spend a lot of time in high traffic tags and you don't get a lot of up votes, then maybe you do need to consider how you answer questions.
In the end, there is nothing specifically negative about the badge. It can be a badge of honor, but it might be worth looking through your answers to see why you aren't getting up votes.
Once you figure that out, you can decide if you want to address it by trying improve your old answers or improve your future answers.
I thought to comment, but need 50+ reputation to do it. But I couldn't resist sharing a link from Rediff.com esp. when I didn't know much about Unsung Hero.
An Unsung hero is one who executes and implements an action but doesn't get due credit or acknowledgment for his actions. An unsung hero is one who acts like a messiah or a manna from heaven who has talent but doesn't get a platform to show case it. He can either be a simple rural boy or an aspiring actor with a penchant for acting. Most of the Unsung heroes are philanthropists and Samaritans who do a lot of benevolent deeds.
Unsung Hero
. Didn't knew whether SO would entertain it :).
The "unsung hero" badge means that you have provided a number of answers that have helped the newbie poster of the question but have not helped other people, whether because the question is in an area that few people are interested in, or because the question is very specific to the original poster's situation. You are a hero because you are helping people; you are unsung because people other than those you helped do not recognize your heroism.
There is plenty of room on Stack Overflow for answers that help only the asker of the question. If someone has spent days wrestling with a bug and can't find it, posting the relevant code here in the hopes that someone with a fresh set of eyes can find it is perfectly legitimate. Similarly with someone posting a question on such an obscure topic that no one else is ever likely to be in the same situation. No one should feel obligated to answer such questions, but no one should feel bad about answering them either.
Personally, "Unsung Hero" is one of the badges I respect the most. It means the person is interested in actually helping people, even if the reputation rewards are minimal.
Those badges are like military medals.. only you (and people who research your endeavors) know if you deserve the badge.
Some people 'earn' them by posting a truckload of below mediocre answers. (just like robo-reviewers who are in it only for the badge).
The more intended 'use' of the Unsung Hero badge is 3-fold:
rewarding and motivating experts
I earned the badge whilst being in the third category in the javascript area, where it is hard to earn rep these day's (especially given the audience, fastest-gun-'problem' and ever-growing truckload of library-related questions). And it did help me over the gap and I'm proud of (actually earning) it.
I remember (some) similar questions/answers on meta.stackexchange.com from a couple of years ago:
Quote from this answer:
It's to reward those people who's answers are accepted but not upvoted. This can be for many reasons - one being that new users can post questions and accept answers, but can't up-vote until they get 15 rep, another being where there are few users who are knowledgeable in a tag.
So it's a way of rewarding those people who help the new users to the site.
And this answer:
The concept here is to give these "poor users" that participate in tags that are not wildly followed or upvoted or happen to answer less popular questions some extra incentive to keep on making Stack Overflow better.
and:
its about giving these users that contribute in a less popular way an incentive to keep contributing
In conclusion, assuming you rightfully earned the Unsung Hero badge, then wear it with pride!
No, one should not avoid getting this badge, even more, you cannot if you are dealing with one-rep people and no high-reps to repeatedly upvote your answers. Just take it and don't be shy.
How very dare you sir, that was my first gold badge! grin
Based on my own barely acknowledged answers, I'd say they were low value questions. I've lost count of the questions I've answered with titles like "How do I do this", or "I want the sum of my oojahs to include the one above".
I see it, answer it correctly (ish). The OP thinks cheers, tries it, tells me I've spelled one of their column names wrong, I fix that, they try again, it works, they tick it. I get a wee message and then some time later a gold badge which I didn't even know existed until it magically appeared against my name.
So I'd say a good deal of it is down to low value questions. That's both in terms of applicability unless you are capable of adapting an answer to a similar question and it's tagged and titled well enough to actually be found.
When I actively joined the community in the past, many of my accepted answers initially were zero score and I earned the "unsung hero" badge after some time. However over time many of these answers have been upvoted multiple times, probably by other readers.
Hence I think the badge may reflect the new, active member with many answers too recent to be upvoted. I do not this it could be low quality answers as they are now upvoted as any others.
It depends on what is your goal on this site.
If whatever "progress" - then no doubt go for this badge. Make a pride of it and boast to your friends.