One of the main reasons that made me create a stackoverflow account at all was the urge to contribute to the community that provided me with so much useful information over the years and helped me becoming a programmer at all.
Besides to asking and answering on my own, gaining the ability to vote was one of the biggest improvements over being just an anonymous spectator.
When I search the web for information and I find a useful answer on stackoverflow, I now usually log in, just to upvote the answer that helped me solve my specific task at hand.
I recently found myself more and more of not just upvoting the answer but also the question that made it even possible for someone to spread his or her knowledge at all.
With the exception of some pretty cr*ppy questions, or questions that only have a "your-answer-is-elsewhere"-link in their comments, I'm starting to develop a habit here.
And now comes the question:
Isn't it fair to upvote the question that made it possible for someone to provide an answer that helped you?
The logic here is: if there wouldn't have been someone to ask the question in the first place, you would probably never have gotten the answer you needed - shouldn't that been rewarded in some way?
In fact, there is the famous question badge, which is rewarded regardless of the quality of a question just for getting 10k views...
Of course it takes a lot more effort to actually solve a problem than to create it, I think we are all on the same page here. ;-) But this has already been considered in the rep system, as upvotes on questions only provide you with 50% of the rep an upvote on an answer would be worth.
How does it come then, that there are usually noticeably more votes on the answer than on the question ?