Sorry about that. I'd hoped the other rate-limits we'd built in over the past couple of years would pick up the slack here, but... That didn't quite happen.
Here's a handy graph of users who hit the new-user asking limit per week, by week:
And here's a corresponding graph of users who hit the question-block, just so you can see that there's no real slack-picking-up happening here:
Oops.
I've put in a change request to restore the ability to customize this limit network wide; if all goes well, that'll be available again in another couple of weeks.
Until then, here's what I'm gonna try:
The new-user ask limit is now one question every 40 minutes, network-wide. That means only 1 question every 40 minutes on Stack Overflow, but also means you'd need to wait 40 minutes after asking a question on, say, Woodworking to ask a related question on Crafting or Home Improvement. And yes, gnat, it also means you'd need to wait 40 minutes after asking a question on Stack Overflow before asking a question on Programmers.
Rolling rate-limits kick in faster. Like, immediately. If your first question is downvoted and you try to ask another one 40 minutes later, you'll be forced to wait at least a day. That's potentially very harsh... But probably also better than penalizing everyone for the behavior of a few. We'd always intended rolling rate-limits to supplant the new-user rate-limits, and this will hopefully allow them to do so.
Why 40 instead of 90 or at least 60? Because there's no ability to customize this per-site right now, and because this applies to all new users from a given IP, this may be very painful for small or niche sites. I picked 40 because 75% of questions scoring <0 asked in the past 30 days got their first downvote within 39 minutes, so this should allow the rolling rate-limits to kick in for most users without requiring per-site overrides.
Of course, anyone caught circumventing either of these restrictions will still have their account and questions unceremoniously deleted and their network blocked from asking further questions for a generous period of time.
Sorry again for not catching this sooner; please let me know if you notice any odd unintended consequences here.