The ["Meta Effect" is well known][1]. Not a week goes by where a valid question is asked on Meta, and Meta users flock to Stack Overflow to upvote or downvote that question.

It's even getting to the point [where the Meta effect is actively detrimental][2] to welcoming new users to Meta.

Because of that, and because the purpose of Meta is to freely discuss issues related to Stack Overflow, I propose that we institute a system-imposed voting freeze (think of a new type of lock that only affects votes on the question) on Stack Overflow questions that are linked to in Meta *questions* for the first 24 hours of the Meta question's existence.

This freeze should only go into effect if the OP of the original Stack Overflow question is the one that poses the Meta question that references the Stack Overflow question.

This accomplishes two goals:

1. Allows free discussion of a question's merits without adversely affecting the OP's Stack Overflow reputation. A new user that brings up a Meta question about their Stack Overflow question needs our guidance, not our judgment. The very fact that they're bringing their problem up to Meta is a step above what we see from users who don't care.

2. Relieves moderators from needing to manually intervene when a question is targeted by the Meta Effect, as this requires near 24-hour coverage of Meta by moderators.

[Robert Harvey's manual lock][3] of a Stack Overflow question brought this idea up.


  [1]: https://www.google.com/search?q=%22meta%20effect%22%20site%3Ameta.stackexchange.com
  [2]: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/262702/is-there-a-problem-with-questions-linked-to-on-meta-recieving-too-much-attention/262703#262703
  [3]: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/269106/is-there-anyway-to-further-improve-my-bad-question#comment80961_269106