As you probably all know, the reputation system is kind of flawed. There are numerous posts and blogs complaining about this and analyzing in detail, so I'll skip it.
Just a few minutes ago, I saw a really stupid question on SO ...however, I wondered that the asker had a reputation in the many thousands. Then I opened its profile and saw it had 700+ very basic questions and merely 10 basic answers. Once again, it illustrated perfectly the problem with SO.
I'll boil it down to the following simple facts:
the system favors asking very basic questions and discourages answering difficult ones
- asking boosts reputation more easely than answering
- basic questions easily boost reputation, tricky/specific ones get almost no votes/views
As a result, SO is flooded with questions daily, dozens per minute. And only the very basic ones, that are googlable anyway, get a few views/answers. The more advanced ones get lost in the crowd forever.
As such, here would be a drastic proposal to alter the reputation system to better reflect the level of helpfulness and expertise.
Make asking questions cost reputation. Always. A bit like bounties, you would have to pay some of your reputation to ask. And new accounts would get something like 1 token to start with, so that they can't flood and have first to provide help before they can request help again.
By default, sort the questions by "reputation offered" amount. So that the big contributors/experts get more exposure when sometimes requiring help.
Distribute the "reputation offered" among the repliers. Of course, in order to increase the reputation points in the "economy", you'd have to, for example, reward twice the reputation points that the asker "paid".
So, what do you think?