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idmean
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Therefore it's pretty safe to give "powers" to high rep users.

Adding a badge to a user or an answer doesn't seem very powerful compared to reputation-based powers: Arbitrary editing, closing questions, seeing deleted posts, deleting posts, undeleting posts, etc.

I'm also concerned about the effect of "Recommended answer" and "Recognized user". I fear it will give a voting bias by attracting readers to those/their answers and consequently impact the voting system as we know it.

I don't see a problem with that. People will still upvote answers that help and downvote if they don't. If some answers get special attention because the organization behind the technology embraces that answer – and the answer works — why shouldn't the answerer get reputation?

Also, consider that these powers will be handed to organizations that power relevant technologies. Hopefully, these organizations are qualified to determine whether a user is highly skilled in their technology. Since "recognized user" gives no other extra powers except "recommending answers" I don't see much of a problem with that.

I do get the sentiment here and in the announcement post that all of this undermines the democratic foundation of Stack Overflow. Autocratically awarding power might set a bad precedent.

I think the abilities above are a red-line. Any stronger powers single-handedly awarded by Stack Exchange Inc. would worry me too. This iteration of collectives, however, doesn't.

idmean
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