There is no question that the quality of questions is a huge problem on the main site. With the recent loss of a substantial number of moderators due to recent events, it has only gotten worse. Many users (including myself) haven't helped the situation by attempting to answer bad questions (usually in an attempt to earn some rep) instead of closing them.
A couple different methods have been proposed to fix this including rep requirements. However, contentions including attempting to bypass it by creating multiple accounts have rightfully (imo) shutdown that proposal.
Instead, I propose an account age requirement. What I mean by this is that in order for someone to post a question their account must be at least lets say 48 hours old. This has been attempted on many other internet platforms including some subreddits (not saying we are reddit, just suggesting this idea isn't radical).
I think this could help for a couple reasons. Many of the bad posts are as I say trigger posts. Someone new to a language has an issue, searches it up, finds Stack Overflow and immediately posts without looking at rules or anything. This would prevent these types of posts. Many of the poor posts are from very new users. This may help solve that.
People may argue that this might not solve this issue but only delay it. People will create the account wait the time period and then post their crappy question. This maybe true. I am really not sure. Maybe we can test it out for a couple weeks and see what happens like we have done with other features.
If you do agree on at least testing out this idea, what time period would you suggest? I think 48 hours might be good because it is long enough to prevent trigger posts while not too long that a people will be discouraged from joining.
I want to hear the community thoughts. I apologize if this has been proposed before, I wasn't able to find it from some Googling so I thought I would ask.
I would like to emphasize obviously this will NOT solve the issue of older users posting bad questions. But it might help solve the issue of new users posting bad questions. They are two different issues. This might help solve one.
I'd also like to argue that this is inline and in fact reinforces Stack Overflow's core ideas as a Wiki for the community not for the individual. The urgency of a new users issue isn't really relevant to the community, having a new user wait some time before posting I don't think hurts the community much. Important and good questions will be asked eventually so that won't change.
Heres the stats:
https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/edit/1162974
avg
doesn't seem to be working properly but by just scrolling through, you can see that most of the posts have low or zero scores.
After downloading the CSV and running an average on that I got an average of 0.2614 for 2019. This in my opinion is low. As opposed to 1.3 in 2014.