> But aren't they actively destroying possibly good content by doing that? Even if the answer didn't get accepted, it could still be helpful for future readers. If they **are** deleting unaccepted answers, then: yes, they could be removing good content. The accepted answer is the best answer *for the OP*, but that isn't the only person we care about - this is why you get rep for upvotes on answers irrespective of whether they're accepted. However, most of the time when a user reaches his daily rate limit (see below), it's users pruning old or duplicate answers. > Why would someone find acceptance rate so important? I have no idea! If they've deleted unaccepted answers with upvotes, it's actually *costing* them rep. to keep their acceptance rate up. > Should something be done against this? There are already limits to prevent users deleting too many of their answers: - A maximum of five answers per day can be deleted - Every time a user hits this daily limit, a flag is automatically generated so mods can look into it and determine if any action needs to be taken. - [Mods do warn users about deleting good content if they are found to be systematically deleting answers with more than a few upvotes](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/293617/destroying-possibly-good-content-for-high-acceptance-rate#comment190001_293620) - Disincentives to discourage the behaviour (losing rep if your answer had upvotes). If an individual user decides they're happy with that trade-off, I think that's fair enough, and it doesn't seem to be a particularly large problem. Right now, there's only three users with 20 or more answers at 100% (who could have got there without deleting anything, remember), and the acceptance rate seems to drop off pretty quickly. --- That said, if there are *individual cases* where an unaccepted but valuable answer is deleted by its author, I think that should be brought up, either by flagging for mod attention or on Meta - we don't want to lose good content, and it can be dissociated from the author's account if they really don't want it in their answer list.