First of all, bad != bad
. There are so many questions that were straight up garbage when they were posted, gruesome code formatting, terrible spelling/grammar, 75% noise etc., yet these questions held value, and were on-topic, despite being - in their initial state - absolutely terrible. Upon encountering a question like this one should - if possible - edit the question into shape, or - if one doesn't have much time - adress the author with a comment, asking him to edit his question (and also refer to the tour, the "How to ask" page etc.).
And then there are questions that have decent formatting, are easy to read yet are so much worse than the questions mentioned above, simply because they completely miss the scope of Stack Overflow. Questions in this category (in my opinion) include, but are not limited to:
- assignment dumps
- duplicates
- off-site-ressource requests
- etc
And these questions will be - if noticed - targeted, closed and deleted by the community, using the moderation tools available to us.
Now, why'd we care if someone answers a bad question that gets deleted later on anyway? They will lose the reputation points gained, why call them out for doing so?
Because it's encouraging users to post low-quality-questions, and these just mean additional moderation efforts, and it's getting pretty annoying tbh.
But those users are just going to ask a new question if you close their initial one!
Which is precisely why we have nice things like question-/answer-bans in place, to keep this site clean. Answering terrible, gruesome and low-effort questions just undermines the general effort of keeping this site clean.
Please also keep in mind that - as mentioned above - those questions will ultimately be targets of (coordinated) moderation efforts of the community. Answering these questions just means that the Roomba won't automatically delete the question, which is not cool.
Close-/Delete-Votes are limited, and having to use some of these precious things on questions that'd automatically qualify for the Roomba without having an answer is just a waste, and also cause for the frustration of some community members that spend a lot of time on Stack Overflow, trying to keep the site clean.
Regarding the Reversal
-badge: In my opinion this is a relic from a time when Stack Overflow was more focussed on amassing content, and less focussed on the quality of said content. It's also frequently awarded when it comes to controversial meta-threads, but that's basically all it is & should be, a meta-badge, not more not less.
TL;DR: Please refrain from answering questions that fail to fit the scope of Stack Overflow. Leave a comment referring to relevant threads, pages in the help-center and so on. Don't encourage the pollution of Stack Overflow.
good
andcorrect
answers to a question. An answer can be correct without neccessarily being good; e.g. a plain code dump prefixed by "try this", or a trivial correction of a typo. The reversal badge specifically is for an awesome answer to a bad (unresearched, unclear, etc) question, which is interesting and has value on its own even though the question might not. But while the SO policies might not actively encourage trivial or lazy answers to bad questions, it doesn't really discourage them either.