#Treat every encounter as a new instance. ##Assume nothing and go from there. There are some people who have or had 1 reputation which I felt were pretty brilliant, simply from the question or answer that they had posted. There are some people who have substantially more - on the order of 10K or more - who I felt really shouldn't be let near a computer based on their interactions. It also helps when you don't presume that you or anyone else is correct simply because one's reputation is high. Keeping humble, being clear, and being accurate helps establish correctness and, in turn, establishes reputation, but don't let it go to one's head. In spite of the absolute rareness of it, even Jon Skeet has had a few answers get away from him before. Ultimately though, as you unlock more and more privileges, your reputation level *does* impact how you interact with community members. - A downvote is the earliest example of this; you spend 1 reputation to send -2 reputation to someone else for any old reason. - You start to be able to see vote counts at 1K, and you may be tempted to draw an opinion of how to vote from seeing that instead of the question. - When you can see deleted content at 10K+, you draw an opinion of the person that posted what is now deleted. - Past 35K, you have unlocked virtually everything which includes the maximum amount of deletions, so you could be slanted towards deleting all of the bad things and draw biases towards that which you are voting to delete. The main advice is as stated: treat every interaction as a new interaction, even if it's with the same person. Only in certain situations should you start drawing parallels or conclusions on someone; that is, if they're starting to show serious signs of being a jerk around here.