I've been thinking. New users start with 1
reputation. This means downvotes have no effect on their reputation, at least until we get their first upvote.
This network is gamified for a reason. There's a psychological effect on us when we see those reputation points rolling. It motivates us to create content with good quality.
But with 1
reputation point, there's no change in reputation from downvotes. Aside from the question/answer score, there's really no negative impact on content with bad quality.
My proposal is that new users start with 10
reputation. It's not much: Just enough that downvotes have a more distinguishable effect on first posts. Think of it as a small starting credit we give to new users, so they can better see the effect their content has on their reputation here. Much like the starting credits some paid platforms give so new users can get acquainted to how the platform works.
Naturally, I think this should probably come with a change on the thresholds for the first privileges one can acquire:
current threshold | new threshold | privilege
| |
20 | 30 | talk in chat
15 | 25 | flag posts
15 | 25 | vote up
10 | 20 | remove new user restrictions
10 | 20 | create wiki posts
5 | 15 | participate in meta
1 | 1 | create posts
The other thresholds could be left as is, I think. Ten more points won't really make a huge difference for them.
It seems my proposal came of as "being more mean to newbies". Let me try to correct that.
This is not about "better punishing new accounts". It's about better teaching new users how the network works. Arguably, losing 10 points that you acquired via an upvote is harsher than losing 10 points that you already got for free. This also won't change a thing for new users that actually post good content: All the initial thresholds take the same amount of upvotes to obtain. Even better, they could feel the network is more open, since we did give them an initial 10
"we trust you" reputation points.
10
.10
point threshold (just a single upvote on an answer, or two on questions, to revert) is much nicer.