This is the flip-side of the fastest gun problem. Yeah, some folks are going to specialize in super-fast answers to easy questions and get more rep points than deserved, but that's not the end of the world in and of itself. (i.e. life's not fair, get used to it!)
The bigger problem is that this has the side effect of causing interesting but more difficult questions to get ignored. Typical example: someone asks a question that gets a lot of views and two or more upvotes, but it's hard enough that no one can answer within an hour or so.
Depending on the tags, this question will quickly fall down the list and stop getting any more views or upvotes even though it's clearly a good question. Additionally, anyone looking at the question now knows that even a good answer is probably maxing out at 25 points coming only from the author of the question. Again, forget the fairness of it, there is the further problem that even if the question gets answered, it is less likely to turn up in future search results.
I realize this issue is addressed in theory with some of the other lists and badges, but don't think any of these really solves it. For example, "active" is cluttered with minor edits and "unanswered" is cluttered with things that were answered in comments or possibly can't be anwered. Plus, the vast majority of people just stick with the default queue (newest).
Possible solutions:
- A new algorithmic list/tab, ideally made the default list. The top posts would be: newer, with upvotes, and unanswered or recently answered. "Newer" might include non-trivial edits if gaming of that could be avoided. In particular, a question with upvotes but no answers, ought to be very near the top, and if it is answered, ought to stay there for a little while longer so that the answer can also get some attention. In another thread, this reddit solution for comments was mentioned and it could perhaps be applied to the lists rather than answers to questions.
- Some kind of reputation reward. Something sort of like a bounty that is automatic and in proportion to both upvotes and how old the question is. But like a bounty, it would require that the author of the question selects it or it receives at least two upvotes. I know badges like Necromancer reward this, but I think that's inadequate.
Edit to add: In response to several comments, I'd like to restate the problem as follows. When viewing a specific tag, we have lots of tabs that do one thing well (newest, active, etc.) but nothing that combines them in an intelligent way. The result is that we seem to have a stable equilibrium on the default view (newest).
Sketch of a possible answer based on comments: Start with the bounties tab, but then add two things. First, have some limited ability for people to set small bounties for free. Second, have some automated bounties set (e.g. for relatively new, upvoted question with no answers). I think that these new forms of bounty could have pretty small values. The point is really to give them a spotlight so they get more views. Much of the reward would end up coming from more upvotes due to more views.
Mandatory response to duplicate flag: I think this is fairly different. That question simply proposed an automatic bounty for upvoted questions. None of the proposals here do that, except in combination with other things (like the question having gone unanswered for some amount of time). There are also some other things discussed here that are not discussed there.
$TIME_PERIOD
).favourite question
feature as it explained here meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/276408/… and here meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/252512/…. When a question got answered I get back, read an answer and often upvote it. i would prefer it is to be more explicit (say, special tab in user profile "I want to know the answer"), because count of favourite stars on a question is an estimation of upvotes on a future answer, and top unanswered questions have many upvotes but just few favourite stars