I'm asking this question because recently I've been seeing something which puzzles me quite a bit.
In one of the tags I follow there's one high-rep user who is on a streak of poorly received questions. The last 10 ones or so (maybe more) all have a negative score, some are closed. I can imagine why, the reason I myself would downvote them is because they look rather lazy.
In fact, the ones that are not closed go on to receive answers from high-rep answerers.
The message I'm getting from this is:
"these kind of questions do not fit the standard, but we will answer them anyway".
Why?
I'm all about helping other fellow programmers, but this seems contradictory. I understand that downvotes and flags on answers convey two very different meanings.
On the other hand, I don't see this for questions. If you downvote a question, and even more so if you vote to close it, you are essentially saying: "this post has problems", for example: it doesn't include enough details, it's poorly formatted, it's not reproducible, it doesn't show effort, etc. Which are more or less the same reasons available when flagging for close.
Does a streak of poorly received questions not affect the poster in any way? If they keep contributing content that doesn't pass scrutiny, I would expect that to reflect on them somehow.
So what is going on? Are poorly received questions fine, as long as they can reasonably be of help to others? What is the rule of thumb?