I know a user whose latest question is from mid 2012 and latest answer is from late 2012.
In the last several years this user collected over 20k points. While this is great for him, I think it's unfair for new, active, users.
This situation resembles, a lot, property management in real life, where early investors accumulate wealth by having investments in the good neighbourhoods, close to CBD. Yes, there are new neighbourhoods and opportunities, but the benefits to reap are not as big.
Answers to early C# and/or Git questions are examples of golden geese.
I don't see this as good for the Stack Overflow community as it biased towards early adopters of the site.
A cap of amount of upvotes on a question/answer (or points one gets from it) would be good (or should be lowered if it already exists). Another option could be adding different number of points as the question/answer ages (or gets more popular).
Response to selected comments:
Communism
Progressive taxing is common across the world and generally considered fair.
As for caps, there already is a cap of 200 reputation per day, so I'm not inventing anything really new here.
Jealousy
No jealousy here. I neither have the skills nor time to be at the top.
jezreal and coldspeed
jezreal and especially coldspeed are excellent examples. Thank you for that.
These users illustrate my point very well. These users work hard and they're great for the community, but they have to fight harder than people who were here when git commit -a
type questions were being asked.
You can get high rep
"There is 0 evidence that new users can't gain reputation."
I don't argue that you cannot get into 100k points. This is not the point I'm making, and I'm sorry if it isn't clear.
My point is that it is progressively harder to as Stack Exchange is getting older.
Do you really attach such a high value to a steadily incrementing number?
Yes and no. It's not really about attaching value. It think it makes it for better community if the return on investment was limited or diminishing over time (or popularity).
Thanks for your comments!
I suspect this will have to be reassessed at some point in the future. It may just be a bit too early now ;) No worries.