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How can I find what users were awarded their scores for? Looking through the profile Activity tab and various sub-tabs, I can't find any stats that show what their reputation was awarded for, for example in percentage:

  • 2% - own answers upvoted or accepted
  • 1% - asking questions
  • 60% - own question upvoted
  • 20% - bounties

Is this info available at all on SE, and for what user privilege categories?

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  • 1
    The information is available on a per action basis and in graph plotted by day, but there are no percentages available that I know of that show what percent of the overall rep came from what actions. but it's probably a good bet that the majority gained most of their rep through receiving answer upvotes and checkmarks.
    – Kevin B
    Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 15:10
  • @Kevin B In a daily graph, what does 15/25 score or answers mean?
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 15:15
  • 15 would mean they received the checkmark, and +25 would mean they received the checkmark and an upvote (15 + 10 = 25)
    – Kevin B
    Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 15:18
  • Thanks. What user privilege categories can see, whom a user received the checkmark or upvote from? Does the system monitor possible abuse in upvoting & accepting answers, and what are the penalties?
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 15:22
  • you can't see who upvoted or downvoted a post, but the checkmark always comes from the user who created the post. Yes, there's a good bit of fraud prevention in place.
    – Kevin B
    Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 15:27
  • @yellowantphil That query says "Enter your UserID". Does it mean one can check only his own rep by running this query, but not a different user's? When I tried to check a certain user, it gives "Invalid column name 'username'. Did you try running it lately? May be it needs some updates?
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 15:27
  • @Kevin B I assume by checkmark you mean an accepted answer? There's also a star "Favorite question", but it doesn't seem to affect the score?
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 15:30
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    "favorite" does nothing for score. it's no different than bookmarking the question in your browser, only it's not as easy to use.
    – Kevin B
    Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 15:30
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    You don't get rep for upvoting others' answers. The "Upvote Answers" column in that query should probably be "Upvoted Answers", since I believe it refers to upvotes on the user's answers. Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 16:10
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    Is this a FAQ proposal? Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 20:22
  • 1
    @Makoto I added the tag "FAQ-Proposal" in response to someone's suggestion. You deleted that tag. Would you care to explain why? Does it mean it no longer can be considered a FAQ Proposal, and that was the primary purpose to delete the tag? Generally, what would it take to add the below answer to FAQ?
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 22:28
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    For context, what the tag is meant for is available here. I removed the tag since it doesn't seem like an FAQ topic. You're asking for general information at best, or for a feature request otherwise. I don't see it as something that would merit the faq-proposed tag.
    – Makoto
    Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 22:30
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    @Makoto Thanks for the link. So, who would decide eventually, whether this question should be added to FAQ or not? Also, if another user will edit the question and add FAQ-Proposal tag to it, would you continue to edit it indefinitely to remove that tag? In other words, are there any Edit privilege limits per question? :)
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 22:34
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    I'd probably only do it once more then flag a moderator for intervention, since I genuinely don't see it as an FAQ entry. You're not asking something that occurs frequently; you're curious about this and thus far, I've only seen yourself interested in it. FAQ entries are really meant for questions that are frequently asked. I would not encourage you to add the tag again, but rather encourage you to peruse questions in the tag to see what kinds of questions are written that are in there.
    – Makoto
    Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 22:36
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    Please note that targeting specific users (hi!) is strongly discouraged. I didn't ignore your comments, I don't see them if you spell my name wrong (which, given that you get an autocomplete for it, seems a bit daft). Given your repeated misunderstandings of how, when and where users earn rep (which is, as usual, in the Help Center) and inability to distinguish between Meta (inevitably generic) and Main contributions, I can only suggest again that you try to learn about this site before dumping endless complaints into Meta.
    – jonrsharpe
    Commented Jul 23, 2016 at 7:32

1 Answer 1

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The simplest way to get an idea of where a user's reputation came from is to look at their profile. Note that Meta sites share their reputation with main sites (activity on Meta appears in the Meta profile, but doesn't have any impact on reputation) so you need to make sure you're on their main site profile, e.g. : http://stackoverflow.com/users/<User ID number>?tab=profile.

Firstly, you can look at their top badges and top posts, which give you a high-level idea of what they spend their time on and what their highest-rated posts are. For more detail, you can switch to the reputation tab on the activity part of their profile (http://stackoverflow.com/users/<User ID number>?tab=reputation), where you can see post by post where their reputation came from.


If you want a summary of some of the sources of rep, you can use the Stack Exchange Data Explorer, which offers this query. Enter the user ID number to get a plot for all major activities resulting in rep awards, as follows:

  • Upvote question: rep gained from upvotes on questions the user has asked (+5 per vote)
  • Upvote answer: rep gained from upvotes on answers the user has provided (+10 per vote)
  • Downvotes own Q and A: rep lost from downvotes on the user's posts (-2 per vote)
  • Accepted Answers: rep gained from the user's answer being accepted by the OP (+15 per answer)
  • Suggested Edits: rep gained from suggesting edits that were subsequently accepted (+2 per accepted edit; note that there is an all-time cap of 2,000 on this, and users with more than 3,000 rep can no longer earn rep from edits)
  • Bounties Started: rep lost from placing bounties on questions (varies)
  • Bounties Received: rep gained from writing answers that were awarded a bounty (varies)

Note that this does not appear to include all possible sources of reputation, see e.g. Why did I gain/lose reputation? Can I audit my reputation history? for more details.

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  • @yellowantphil Keeping up with my generic research, are there any known user accessible tools allowing to do a cross-check of votes cast on SE sites? For example, such tool would be expected to check what members serially upvoted a certain user answers, and in turn whether that user serially upvoted their answers. Its known, multiple user names aren't encouraged, but not prohibited or programmatically prevented by the SE site. Such tool would allow to reveal, if unfair rep is grossly gained fast by registering multiple accs or conspiring a few users to serially upvote each others answers.
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 23, 2016 at 21:06
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    Such a tool doesn't exist publicly, nor could it; votes are anonymous.
    – jonrsharpe
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 10:43
  • It looks like a useful edit, though I'm not sure why did you remove OldUserName tool from it? Even if it lists several existing accs, are these accs belong to the same user, and how you can verify that in practice? They can in fact belong to the same user, and logged in from the same IP or via different proxies. Keep in mind, purpose of this thread is auditory in nature, not user curiosity, as I explained earlier, so using tools is required, Help info is not sufficient.
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 13:49
  • "why did you remove OldUserName tool from it?" - because it clearly doesn't work, the results you posted were obvious nonsense, and encouraging some sort of vigilante behaviour is misguided at best. "how you can verify that in practice?" - you and I can't, really. Only the moderators have the appropriate tools to investigate this, so if you see suspicious behaviour flag it for them to deal with. "purpose of this thread is auditory in nature" - related to listening? If you mean it's to do with auditing, leave that to mods and SE employees, who actually have the access to do it properly.
    – jonrsharpe
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 13:51
  • As to lets call it "CrossVoteCheck" tool I mentioned, it might have been developed by a 3rd party, since voter anonymity can theoretically be exploited by certain users to circumvent fair collection of rep scores, as in the example given above. Its nice if a similar tool is regularly run by SE server to keep the system in sane state, but I don't know its the case, and independent user audits can be run in suspicious cases. :) One typical case is serial privilege abuse, which hints the audit is due as the user doesn't value their reps much (assuming effective abuse punishment is in place).
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 13:57
  • Your thoughts about mod and staff investigations make sense. The problem I see is to what degree mods who are community members are willing to block inappropriate or abusive & oppressive conduct if it becomes part of the site culture and exhibited by more than one member at a time, but several at once. I noticed that in some cases mods don't want to interfere with "the crowd" given their flag comments despite proper assessment. That's why independent user audits IMO are required components to keep the site in sanity state and friendly for all user categories.
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 14:08
  • Let's not get carried away here; what you describe as "serial privilege abuse" is me pointing out that you keep being wrong, and "independent user audits" is obsessive people pursuing personal vendettas over misperceived wrongdoing by wasting their free time on paranoia. Again, if you see actual suspicious voting behaviour then flag it for mods, but this isn't it.
    – jonrsharpe
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 14:08
  • That's why I suggested certain barriers in other threads, like demonstrated competence, anonymous mandatory comments, edits quality thresholds, etc. They are aimed to balance certain negative trends in the existing on Meta culture, criticized in many independent sources by SO high rep members themselves. User run member rep audits is just another component in the chain ensuring the site sanity and friendliness for all user categories. However, you understand, these are just proposals, and users have no control to have them implemented.
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 14:21
  • Hence, the trend to suppress these proposals at the start and hide them from other users is overprotective of the existing privilege system, and IMO highly negative, since it doesn't allow user majority to express themselves on Meta, suppressed by small minority. This means, the site looses plenty of useful feedback, and it negatively affects its development. We do realize, the site is someone's business, not ours, so why care? Because let's face it, its quite useful for large number of people, and many folks want it to develop and improve to feel its their own "home", not someone else's.
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 14:27
  • And, lets not forget the main thing, there're only a handful of folks in every tag category, who are willing and able to answer a question of any reasonable complexity. So some users become fans of these experts, they are grateful and want to learn more about these folks, and how they archive high scores. In that case audit tools can help as well. :) Another reason to have such tools in place is natural desire of many members to learn accelerated rep techniques, and the best way to learn them is study methods used by high rep members, just as these members did when they started here.
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 14:36
  • Returning to a user rep audit and relevant to the subject possible voting fraud, I was advised of a useful for members FAQ What is serial voting and how does it affect me?. Apparently, a script is run nightly to check this, but its not exhaustive based on my experience. :) I will suggest to add "Low quality edit supplemented by downvote" to its criteria set. I hope my series of proposals stated in the shortly closed by high rep users threads may be interesting to the portal decision makers.
    – sambul35
    Commented Jul 24, 2016 at 20:11

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