We've had numerous discussions on question quality, and one of the issues raised is that people are answering poor questions before they get closed. I'd like to suggest a potential option which would make downvotes actually somewhat useful and help to get poor questions (as judged by the community) closed quicker. What I suggest is the following:
- For every X net votes below zero a question has (let's say five for now), the amount of close votes required is reduced by one.
- A minimum of two close votes is but there must be a minimum
- If a downvote would reduce the amount of close votes needed to zero, one more close vote would still be required (so a downvote alone cannot close a question).
Let's provide a few examples to clear any confusion:
- A question has a score of -5 and has no close votes. Now only 4 votes are needed to close the question.
- A question has a score of -4 and already has 4 votes to close, but then gets downvoted. Now the question still requires one more vote to close the question.
- A question has 5 upvotes and 5 downvotes (i.e. a score of 0). Since the net score is zero, 5 votes are needed to close the question.
- A question has a score of -25. Two votes are still needed to close the question, despite the downvotes.
Would this not help to utilise the signal that the community already provides? I think this would help to get bad questions out of the way, while not affecting most questions which are of acceptable quality.