There's a flaw with the Stack Overflow reputation system that's affecting new users with very low (or even zero) reputation. And I mean, in a good way for them, but not good for the rest of the community.
Scenario:
A new user registers for Stack Overflow. They don't read the FAQ or the site rules, they just go straight to asking a question. This leads to a, well, not-so-good-quality question being asked. That question was subsequently closed and received 10 downvotes. After some time, since the question wasn't well-received by the community, either the OP deletes the question or a moderator does. And to the OP's surprise, once the question was deleted they got 20 (21 total) reputation points!
That happened because a user's reputation cannot go below 1, and all reputation lost or gained is revoked when a question gets deleted. 10 downvotes (and 0 upvotes) equals -20 reputation, and the user's reputation was already at 1 so it couldn't go any lower, and the -20 reputation was revoked when the question was deleted which gave the user +20 reputation.
This is very bad because the reputation system is basically rewarding new users for asking bad questions (if they get downvoted and deleted, which most bad questions do).
Proposal:
I propose a change to the reputation system to prevent the above things from happening (low-rep user gets more reputation than they started with after bad post is deleted). If a bad (downvoted and closed not as duplicate) post is deleted, the reputation lost from it will not be returned to the OP.