I've noticed a rather disturbing trend revolving around canonical questions. It seems as though many people tend to think that canonical questions should be community wiki, that they should not award anyone rep.
Why?
- Why shouldn't I get rep on a Q&A I worked on for a week?
- Why shouldn't I get the badges?
- Why would I actually take the time to make a canonical answer if I know it's not going to be accepted well, I'm going to get much headaches and eventually, no reward from it?
STAHP
This attitude is annoying and disturbing. If I work on a canonical and post it, I deserve all the rep on it.
Now, I don't mind the rep, or the badges. I've over 50k, I'm past that, and so are many of the people who write canonicals. But this whole overhead and negativity around it really sucks the juice out of us.
Yeah, we get rep for our excellent question and answer. DEAL WITH IT.
This is a discussion more than anything else, (which I don't tend to do on meta, because I usually try to come up with solutions to every problem I raise). But I think the problem in this case is not systematic ot programmatic, but cultural and behavioral.
What do you think we should do? We've already a blog post saying it's OK, it's been discussed several times and we've reached the same conclusion: We want canonicals, so why must every canonical open and close 5 times and then be made CW or dissociated from the OP's account?
I keep saying "I" in this question, but I actually mean anyone who's posting/thinking of posting a canonical question and answer pair