So recently, we've been seeing a lot of discussion around Stack Overflow not being very welcoming. There are two questions that proposed an approach to handle downvotes on new users, both massively downvoted:
- Why not offer a second chance to new users before they are massively downvoted?
- Is downvoting new users a barrier to Stack Overflow's growth?
I'll take this shot anyway.
First of all:
I agree that limiting downvotes is a bad idea, and that bad questions are bad questions, no matter what. Bad content needs to be downvoted, period.
But:
Downvotes are a heavy measure, and - sadly - rarely followed by a helpful comment. This needs to change, at least for new users. When a new user asks a bad question, he might not know about site politics or how things work around here. Sure, we've got a new, shiny question wizard now, but there might be more ways to deal with bad content by new users better.
My proposal:
When a user downvotes a new users question (first question, etc.), a warning appears, just like when you try to vote on your own question. It says something along the lines of: "This user is new, consider helping them out". The downvote will still be counted.
The message might look like this:
What do you think about this approach? Is there anything I've missed?
Feedback is very welcome.