It's commonly said that 10% of the worldwide population have 90% of the wealth (also known as the Pareto Principle). Just for fun I wanted to check the distribution of wealth (reputation-wise) of users on Stack Overflow to see if there is a correlation.
I used the Data Explorer to query this:
Data Explorer Query
The query I wrote returned:
TotalRep | UserCount | Top10RepTotal | Bottom90RepTotal | Top10% | Bottom90%
==============================================================================
453105542 | 3536573 | 429270432 | 23835190 | 94.7396 | 5.2604
So according to this, the top 10% of users currently hold nearly 95% of the total rep on the site.
Is this query accurate? Are there users that should be excluded, i.e. anonymous users? How would I filter them?
Also, is the reputation of the top users, i.e. Jon Skeet accurate, as I'm sure I've read before he's on a triple roll-over or something because he had too much wealth?
Update
So based on comments and the answer from @eis, here's the query excluding users with no activity on the site, i.e. users with 1 reputation point:
Data Explorer Query (More Than 1 Reputation)
Query results:
TotalRep | UserCount | Top10RepTotal | Bottom90RepTotal | Top10% | Bottom90%
==============================================================================
450999136 | 1430167 | 392932581 | 58066946 | 87.124 | 12.8752
Looking at only these users, the user count is reduced by almost 60%. The results now show that the top 10% of users hold around 87% of the total reputation on the site, a reduction of around 8% from the previous query.
@KarolyHorvath:
I wouldn't consider anybody with less than.. say a 100 rep a serious user. That long tail below that threshold massively distorts the percenteges.
Data Explorer Query (More Than 100 Reputation)
Query results:
TotalRep | UserCount | Top10RepTotal | Bottom90RepTotal | Top10% | Bottom90%
==============================================================================
425661417 | 313223 | 292350992 | 133312738 | 68.6816 | 31.319