With the reputation earning system, a question with score +2/-4 or a response +1/-4 will give +2 reputation.
Why is the reputation system unbalanced on questions/answers? What is the motivation behind this choice?
With the reputation earning system, a question with score +2/-4 or a response +1/-4 will give +2 reputation.
Why is the reputation system unbalanced on questions/answers? What is the motivation behind this choice?
I can name a few reasons from the top of my head:
To keep people motivated in contributing
Downvotes are perceived as extremely painful with -2 rep already because receiving one carries the message: "Go away, you're not welcome here". With the imbalance, if the person receives at least some upvotes, they will still see some gained reputation, carrying the message that their efforts were judged to have at least some worth, and they should keep trying.
For the same reason, downvotes are not notified of on the reputation toolbar button.
Downvotes are actually the next best thing to upvotes
The actual social "quality scale" is like this: like -- dislike -- ignore. If a post attracted downvotes, this means it incited at least some response in people, and they went to the trouble to spend their time and do something.
If it's an answer, this counts double because downvoting an answer also takes your own reputation, forcing you to think twice if it's really so harmful to just be let be that you must warn others even at the cost of your own contribution score.
Besides, people could dislike something not only if it's of low quality but because it's controversial (e.g. if they feel it shows nefarious intent). If anything, this speaks in favor of the quality of such a post because it managed to attract such a strong response. Controversial posts will likely attract both upvotes and downvotes, and the imbalance gives the person a chance to at least break even in such a case.
This is even more critical at sites which discuss more subjective topics since a downvote there could mean mere disagreement with the advice.
An upvote typically means that the post helped someone solve a real life programming problem, likely saving hours or days of work. A downvote just means someone disagreed with the post, wasting only seconds or at most minutes reading it. Therefore, from the standpoint of helping the programming community, an upvote represents more of a gain than a downvote does a loss.
Even if all downvotes represented people who used a post and found it didn't work, trying something that doesn't work costs less than the benefit from trying something that does work.