This question is similar to Filter questions by asker's reputation or Ability to ignore questions from low rep users, but does not equate the asker's reputation with the difficulty or level. There are many other questions on meta evoking this phenomenon: trivial questions have taken over.
Note: I speak of difficult or level, and not of quality. A very simple question can nonetheless by of high quality (showing research, good redaction skills, etc...) and a difficult question can be of low quality. I am not interested, here, about quality; it is addressed by other features.
Background:
When Stack Overflow started, the community was somewhat of an elite, and therefore the level of the questions was relatively high. Speaking about the C++ tag, for example, every day would see questions that required digging into the darkest corners of the C++ Standard.
As time went by, and Stack Overflow gained in popularity, the level of questions has dwindled. I believe this is for the better, as it means that the bar of entry is low and therefore we reach (and help) more people.
On the other hand, it also means that as a somewhat experienced developer (in C++), most questions are desperately boring. I am not interested in their answer, and if I were to attempt to actually answer I would probably be overtaken by 2 or 3 other users, so why bother?
And thus I face starvation: difficult questions, to which I could contribute or learn from, are buried in a mass of easy questions and I starve as I attempt to sift through them. And I know that I am not alone (from the echoes on meta).
Feature-request:
It seems that we need a mean (whatever it is) of:
- ranking the difficulty of a question
- filtering questions based on this difficulty
I have a couple ideas as to how this could be addressed, and I will propose a straw-man as a starting point to spark the discussion.
Note: it should be noted, by all straw-men, that approaching sparks can prove lethal.
Note: the bounty already help target interesting/difficult questions in general; however setting up a bounty requires reputation already, and the willingness to part with it. I see no reason why the system should penalize people asking difficult questions.