I've already expressed my disagreement with having a reputation barrier for question-asking here, which is the only way that I see this proposal being effective. Many if not most of the worst questions we get every day are from low-rep users. Even if you give three "free" questions to them, the question ban kicks in at the third terrible question, so we're back to where we are today.
I've been saying this quite a bit lately, but I really am beginning to believe that for the worst of the worst questions we get every day, many of them are being asked by people who have worked around the question ban in one way or another. When I'm regularly dealing with people who are on their fifth to seventh question-banned account, that's an awful lot of bad questions one person has been responsible for. Question-ban avoidance is also one of the primary drivers of sock puppet upvoting and coordinated voting rings.
Your proposed reputation cost system would only impact those who asked more than their three "free" questions, yet were not question-banned and who didn't earn enough reputation to keep "paying" for additional questions. I'm thinking that's not a very large portion of the really bad questions we get every day. Also, it would add an incentive to get voting rings or sock puppets to inflate your reputation so that you could keep asking. As I indicated, question-ban-related vote fraud is a real problem right now, and I see this making it worse. That distorts the voting on bad content, pushing it ahead of the good.
Cracking down on question ban recidivism (both by more effective prevention of new account creation and by helping to suss out vote fraud around it) will in my opinion have a significant impact on the volume of bad questions being asked. I hear there is work being done on this, and I am eagerly anticipating that coming online.
To aid this, we need to be able to identify and deal with bad questions earlier. The weighting for the close votes queue has shifted to newer posts, which is leading to more questions being closed sooner rather than later. Perhaps better heuristics for placing new questions in the Low Quality Posts review queue could also help pick these out earlier. There have to be other ways of having the system identify problematic posts. Improvements here would assist with a reinforced question-asking ban to identify and throttle the worst askers.
magic number
(maybe thebar to entry
should be higher, or different) but I believe applying this principle is still interesting. One of the sites I frequent often (because of my arcade pcb hobby) has a 10 (non spam) post bar to entry for gaining access to thetech/repair
andfor sale
parts of the site and that has been working fine for them (not to be flooded with repair help questions). People can get plenty of value from SO, even if it would require them to put a bit more (virtual) effort in.N
upvoted answers could help, but would actually encourage more garbage (in the form of A's rather than Q's) from those determined to post their question. It might almost assure they never get the right to Ask from dnvotes. I would kind of like a waiting period: you cant post a Question for N days (or maybe hours). Maybe that would get them to Google.