Outlier examples aside, is there some reason to believe that this effect is not already accounted for in the current badge thresholds?
Badge requirements are already arbitrary to some extent anyway. Given that one can expect a certain percentage of accepted answers to fail to garner an up-vote (from the questioner or otherwise), it seems reasonable to me to assume that the Stack Overflow staff who have set the badge requirements have already taken this into account, reducing the requirement from what it otherwise would be, were the acceptance of an answer meant to contribute to progress toward the badge.
In other words, no…I'm not sure I see the value of counting an accepted answer toward the progress of a tag badge.
In the event that the requested change is implemented, I would propose two qualifications:
- The tag badge requirement be revisited and recalibrated to attempt to preserve the current meaning of the badge (i.e. taking into account current badge holders and their average relative proportions of accepted and non-up-voted answers)
- An acceptance of an answer be counted toward the tag badge only if the questioner did not also up-vote the answer (i.e. don't double-count the input from the questioner).
Addendum:
For those so adamant that without the extra point toward the badge for accepted-but-not-up-voted answers, valuable contributions to Stack Exchange sites will not be made, take a moment to consider this:
It would have been trivial for SE to cause an automatic up-vote by the questioner for any question that was accepted. But they didn't do that. It seems clear that the intent is for an up-vote and an accepted answer to mean two different things. As such, it also seems clear that the tag badge, being based on up-votes, is intended to reflect the thing that up-votes mean and not the thing that accepted answers mean.
Conflating the two is just as clearly in conflict with the actual intent of the site design.
I get that it's human nature to get all hot and bothered about whether something is "fair", and I also get that it's natural to perceive a system that fails to award progress in a tag for a question that was accepted as "unfair". But the fact is, this isn't a competition and as such there's no such thing as "fair" or "unfair". Worrying about the fairness of it all is pointless.
And frankly, personally I'd rather be involved in a "helping others" site where the help is given freely, and without so much fretting about what one gets in return. The reputation and badge system is a nice add-on, and it does provide a coarse-grained mechanism to help improve the quality of the site (by restricting users until they have proven their competence and pro-social behavior). But it's already doing its job, and there's no evidence that the change being proposed here will produce any significant improvement in the quality of the site.
If there really are people who are withholding their expertise for the sole reason that on occasion when they answer a question in manner helpful enough for the questioner to accept the answer, the question still is not awarded an up-vote, well…I feel that those people are probably not really the people the site ought to be catering to in the first place. They are "in it" for the wrong reasons.