I just came across this question in Meta: SO fails to promote well-researched, well-written, but difficult questions, and once I finished reading it. I think of something I might bring some discussions about a feature that can somehow approaches the problem.
The problem is that questions currently have no indicator that shows how difficult the questions are. Challenging and time-consuming questions will just award with the same amount of fake internet points as easy questions that someone just come by and answer it within a few seconds. One would just keep answering easy questions rather than spending hours to try to solve a question that will yield the same reward.
I think if there is a feature that indicates the difficulty of a question and such feature is able to affect the reputation gain from answering its question then it might be some progress for us. I would call it a Difficulty Vote (DV) or it can be named anything, really, only the feature functionality that I care about.
What is the definition of a difficult question?
If a Gold Badge user cannot answer a question, it is considered "difficult" and hence worth a DV.
How it works and its conditions are as the following:
- Only a Gold Badge user of one of the question's tags is able to upvote the DV. Therefore, only experts can vote that this question is difficult. (I am also thinking that if a Gold Badge user upvotes the DV, the user is no longer able to answer the question)
- DV will affect the reputation gain by some conditions that it is really on SO to decide. For example, if the question has more than 5 DVs then the accepted answer will get +50 more reputations from what a normal accepted answer would get. Bounty is still able to further push the reward.
What benefits will this feature bring to SO site and its community?
- Questions will have more information about how difficult they are.
- Difficult questions are encouraging users to answer by their attractive reward (extra reputations).
- Can be another dimension to analyze in terms of statistics data.
Let's discuss!
Updated "difficulty" definition.