The OP of a question has the ability to mark one of the answers to their question as "accepted". This is a publicly visible signal to everyone else that the answer worked for the OP. However, accepting an answer also gives the author of the answer +15 reputation. There's no clear benefit to the site for users to gain reputation in this way, and should be disabled. The +2 gained by the OP also serves no purpose at that point, and should be disabled as well.
Specific issues that are addressed by this change:
Incentive to provide answers that are only useful to the OP.
Helping the OP is incidental to the goal of building a repository of high quality questions, and reputation gain from helping individual users is the wrong incentive structure for such a goal. In fact, helping the OP specifically is more akin to treating the site as a help-desk, which is counter-productive to the goals of the site.
Incentive to post FGITW answers.
Given multiple equivalent answers that solve the OP's problem, they tend to, quite reasonably, accept the first of these answers. This incentivizes users to post answers as soon as possible (FGITW syndrome), which affects the quality of answers. It also makes users less inclined to search for duplicate targets, resulting in common duplicates being answered frequently, which is unhelpful to the site.
Comments asking the OP to accept answers.
By and large, users claim they leave "please accept an answer" comments because they want to educate the OP about how the site works. If this is true, such comments will still be posted in the same quantity. However, circumstantial evidence suggests that reputation gain plays a large role in this. e.g. there's a high correlation between users posting such comments, and the user also having posted an answer to the question they commented on. Also, Meta, which has no reputation gain from accepted answers, almost never gets any "accept this answer" comments.
Posting lots of answers to low quality questions.
Currently, there is no reputation cap on reputation gained from accepted answers. This incentivizes posting lots of answers every day, and posting answers that are helpful only to the OP. This issue would be partially mitigated by subjecting such reputation gain to the daily reputation cap, but that still means it's worthwhile posting a dozen answers per day that solve OPs' problems, without regard to the quality of the question.
Reputation gained from accepted answers gives privileges on the site.
OPs are typically not qualified to judge whether the quality of an answer is up to the site's standards, and they shouldn't be able to grant reputation (and directly, privileges) to users via an accept. OPs should get to pick which answer helped them the most, and let others know that, they just shouldn't be able to confer reputation in this way.
It is unlikely that the proposal will get rid of the abovementioned issues completely, but it will hopefully mitigate them to a significant extent.
What is not proposed:
Disabling the accept feature entirely.
OPs can still publicly indicate which answer they found the most helpful. This proposal doesn't change anything for users other than the asker, and answerer. (Currently, the UI doesn't make it clear what an "accepted" answer means exactly, and improvements can certainly be made in that regard, but that's beyond the scope of this proposal.)
Retroactively removing reputation gained from accepted answers.
Reputation gained from accepts has been earned in good faith, without violating any rules/norms of the site. I don't see that removing the reputation that was gained this way helps the site moving forward.
Disabling this network wide.
I don't know enough about how other sites on the network work to know if this is appropriate for those sites. Several sites haven't even unpinned accepted answers, indicating a higher importance for accepted answers than on this site, and reputation gain may well be important/relevant/useful for them.
Changing any of the badges related to accepted answers.
While earning badges is an incentive to act in a particular way, there's no clear evidence that it's anywhere as strong of a motivation as reputation.
This idea has been proposed 6 years ago and was negatively received, but I'm hoping that the community's opinion on this subject has changed in the interim. E.g., one of the counter-arguments to the old proposal was that the issue of "accept comments" is "manageable", but at least that issue has become bad enough that site moderators were recently motivated to propose a rule to disallow such comments entirely.
Please share any feedback on this proposal, particularly the downsides, but also any upsides that I may have missed out.