#Validation vs. Gamification
Points on Stackoverflow have two distinct uses. The first is the gamification experience. Points give us motivation to ask or answer questions, and reward us for that. 
The second aspect is validation. Points should be a mean for validation, and high score should be a measure of reliability. A user with a high score should be someone who is more likely to be reliable in communicating code solutions, and therefor could be trusted by the community in this aspect. 

The problem with this decision is that it reduces the value of good answers. 
While a highly voted answer to a question is one that stands out and competes with other answers, questions are voted on a "me too" basis.  

I think validation/reliability aspect of points has got a hit by this decision. 

#Changing rules retroactively 
Perhaps Stackoverflow would like votse for questions to be based on their quality, and not a "me too" basis, which can justify this change. The main problem is that votes up to know were made on the basis of a different virtual contract, in which votes for questions are worth 5 points, and such a consideration was not presented. This retroactive change is kind of a violation of trust and contract. 

However, there is another problematic aspect to this. Questions are mostly compete not by their quality but by their topic. Once someone writes a bad question on a relevant topic, another person can't write a better quality question on the same topic. This would be considered a duplication. As often done, the only solution is to edit the low quality question of the OP. Now users who posted a poor quality question can gain lots of reputation. Validation/reliability of points/reputation has decreased.