Recently I asked How many new users does Stack Overflow get per day? According to the user's page, when sorted by creation date, there are roughly 100 pages per day (this is fairly accurate even back to 3 weeks time) - or roughly 3600 new registered users per day.
As far as a I can tell, this where the highest potential for misunderstanding the Stack Exchange software occurs. There are many guidelines for creating questions, but no hurdles aside from 45 characters of text, one tag name, and clicking post for new users.
This does not really allow them much opportunity to work with the system before jumping in to a venue which if done incorrectly requires community time to remedy. On smaller exchanges, this is a moot point because some of them only get a dozen questions per day. But on Stack Overflow, where there are 8 thousand questions per day, the circumstances are a little different.
Upon inspection of the newly created user list, questions like this appear:
https://stackoverflow.com/q/23277349/1026459
https://stackoverflow.com/q/23277617/1026459
https://stackoverflow.com/q/23268593/1026459
https://stackoverflow.com/q/23268686/1026459
https://stackoverflow.com/q/23268402/1026459
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https://stackoverflow.com/q/23268170/1026459
And answers like these:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/23268957/1026459
https://stackoverflow.com/users/3568648/rich-pickering (9 answers in 3 hours of being a user!)
While the majority of questions from these first day users tend to be 0 vote with no answer, negatively voted, or closed; the answers tend to be on topic, at times upvoted, and even some accepted.
My point in all of this is that perhaps it would benefit users if they were more familiar with the way asking questions worked before they posted them. And in order to accomplish that, a very small reputation barrier to asking questions could get them to be more accustomed to the site, or perhaps a small waiting time from when the account was first created.
While this will potentially limit a large amount of new questions from users, it will also allow them to search for duplicates faster as they cannot ask at first. Moreover, this will encourage them to have a positive interaction before posting a question.
The amount of users registering per day is only growing with time. I believe this is definitely a positive thing for Stack Overflow, and it also means there is an opportunity to screen for higher quality questions.
What effect would introducing a small barrier for new users to ask a question have on Stack Overflow? What could this barrier look like?
- Perhaps in the form of a privilege at 5 reputation (posting answers would still be 1)
- Perhaps require the user to have registered at the site for a short time period before being able to ask? (Seems like it could have less impact, other access unaffected)