The answer below is the best information we have for people who are getting a notice that the system is no longer accepting questions or answers from their account. This is a tough situation. It's unlikely there's a quick fix. Resolving this is going to take work on the part of the person who owns the account. If that's you, and you want to resolve this, read the entire answer below.
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While trying to ask a question, one could see:
You can't post new questions right now
Sorry, we are no longer accepting questions from your account because most of your questions need improvement or are out of scope for this site. See the Help Center page Why are questions no longer being accepted from my account? to learn more.
Please do not create a new account. Instead, work on improving your existing questions by editing them to comply with the site's guidelines and address any feedback you've received. You can also continue to contribute to the site in other ways, such as editing other posts to improve them.
Likewise, for answers:
Sorry, we are no longer accepting questions/answers from your account because most of your answers need improvement or do not sufficiently answer the question. See the Help Center to learn more.
The answer below covers the following points:
Why am I getting this message?
Are deleted posts taken into account too?
Is a question/answer ban the same as a suspension?
How do I avoid getting a question ban?
How long do I have to wait before I can post again? What can I do to release the ban? How can I reactivate my account?
Can I simply create a new account?
I'll just ask on Super User or Server Fault, and they'll migrate my question to the correct site!
As stated in the tour, Stack Exchange is a network of question and answer sites, not discussion forums. This implies that all posts are expected to have value for later visitors, in addition to helping the asker. To enforce that, users who consistently post low-quality questions and answers are blocked. This includes posts that:
An automatic filter is in place to ban questions and/or answers from IP addresses or accounts with a history of extremely poor posts.
To avoid users bypassing the filter, its internal rules are a secret, but it is partly based on downvotes cast by other members of the community. If the other members of the site consistently give your posts a low score, you should try to identify the reason(s) for this.
Once you have posted too many poorly-received questions or answers, you will be banned from posting more, and you will see the error message.
If a post was poorly received (downvoted or closed), that will continue to count against your account even if the post is deleted! Whenever possible, try to fix posts instead of deleting them.
Additionally, deletion itself counts against questions less than 30 days old when deleted if others have invested time into answering or moderating (editing/reviewing) the question.
Finally, deleted answers always count toward an automatic ban on new accounts.
It's not a problem to have deleted posts, but if a large percentage of your posts are deleted (either by yourself or the community), then they are likely not suitable for the site. Posting them consumes time from users who read them, edit them, or respond to them. Therefore, deleted posts among many other factors, can cause the filter to affect you.
I am unable to undelete my post after I have edited it...
If you cannot undelete the post after editing it, then raise an "in need of moderator intervention" flag on the post briefly explaining that you have substantially revised the question/answer and asking for a moderator to review the post for undeletion. The moderator who handles the flag may decide to undelete the post, or they may choose to keep it deleted, if the post still does not meet Stack Overflow's quality guidelines.
Is a question/answer ban the same as a suspension?
No. A suspension is a manual temporary penalty - during which a user cannot ask questions or post answers. All other privileges, including commenting and voting, are also revoked by temporarily setting your reputation to 1. Such suspension is publicly visible to other users.
A post ban is enforced automatically by the system and only prevents posting questions or answers. It is invisible to users who are not moderators.
Questions are expected to have value for later visitors, in addition to helping the asker. So, if many of your questions aren't answered, or are downvoted, closed, or deleted (by you or the community), then they didn't meet the expected quality. Be sure to understand why those things happen and learn from them. Don't simply repost the same question again.
If you're not sure what qualifies as a "good question", there are some hints and tips available:
Questions that are cleanly formatted tend to be received better than ones that are unformatted, poorly formatted, over-use formatting, or use formatting types contrary to their intended use (e.g. using code formatting for emphasis). In particular, be sure to:
Do not use images for text-based information (code, errors, data, etc.). Images can sometimes provide good supplementary information, but they should not be used for the purpose of including text-based information in your question.
Indent your code and use one indenting style consistently throughout your code. It doesn't really matter which style you choose (although, for some languages, some styles are more appropriate than others). Pick a style and use it consistently for all code in a single question.
Not doing any of the above greatly increases the likelihood that a question will be received poorly.
How long do I have to wait before I can post again? What can I do to release the ban? How can I reactivate my account?
Automatic bans never expire or "time out". This means that you cannot simply wait for a certain amount of time. If you do not take action to improve, you will only be permitted to post once every 6 months. The only way for the ban to be lifted is by contributing positively to the site.
Before you do anything else, fix your existing posts! As noted above, downvotes cast by the rest of the community factor into the ban - so the single best thing you can do to get the ban lifted is to address any objections raised by others. Were your past questions unclear? Did they fail to show any effort on your part? Formatted or titled poorly? Too long or too short? Then fix them!
Note the emphasis on fixing. Do not delete your posts. As explained above, deleted questions (if less than 30 days old when deleted) do count toward the question ban. Deleting your posts does not help to lift the ban. Only fixing them does!
Keep in mind that, while the details of the algorithm are secret, question bans generally result from many low-quality questions. Try to fix every question you can, following the hints from the previous section. Most questions can be fixed this way. Even if your question was a duplicate, for example, you can try to write a better explanation of the duplicate problem, or choose a better title that helps people understand that it's the same question (and which helps people to find the question with a search engine).
If you're unable to improve your existing questions (for example, because the questions were off topic, or about problems caused by typos), you'll get the chance to ask one new question six months after your last question. If that question is positively received, you may be able to continue asking questions; if not, then the ban will remain in effect, and you'll have to wait another six months to ask your next question.
Moderators cannot lift the ban, so don't ask them to do so. The only way for the ban to be lifted is for you to start contributing positively to the site.
The ban is also not automatically lifted just because you made edits which you think improve your questions - you will need to wait for other users to agree and improve your question scores (by upvoting or by removing their previous downvotes) and for the algorithm to notice the score improvement.
If you are banned from asking questions, contributing quality answers that get upvoted might enable you to ask questions again. However, as the internals of the filter are secret, there is no way to know for sure.
Can I simply create a new account (or delete my current account and recreate it)?
Deleting and recreating a new account will hurt you, not help. Your question history is tracked at a lower level than your account, so a negative asking record will still affect a new account. Deleting your current profile will, however, make it close to impossible for you to improve your already existing questions and answers, as the system will not treat them as owned by the recreated profile for anything other than the post rate limits and question/answer bans. Thus, deleting and recreating your account will make it harder to get out of a question or answer ban.
I'll just ask somewhere else on the SE network, and they'll migrate my question to the correct site!
Migrations are not possible if your account is banned from asking questions on the destination site. The question will simply be closed as off-topic, but not migrated.
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