Those of you who suffer from [banner blindness](https://www.nngroup.com/articles/banner-blindness-old-and-new-findings/) may not have noticed the announcement:

[**Stack Overflow is changing the reputation scoring system to make the reputation earned from upvotes on *questions* equal to the reputation earned from upvotes on *answers*.**](https://stackoverflow.blog/2019/11/13/were-rewarding-the-question-askers/) Previously, upvotes on questions netted you only +5 reputation, whereas upvotes on answers netted you +10 reputation. Now, upvotes on posts will always be worth +10 reputation, regardless of whether that post is a question or an answer.

This change will not only take effect for contributions from here forward, but it will also be applied *retroactively*. A global reputation recalculation is pending and will be completed soon.

The net effect will be to reward the contributions of users who have asked well-received questions, in recognition of the fact that useful, high-quality questions are just as valuable as high-quality answers. Asking a good question is difficult, takes practice, and is a meaningful contribution to the community at large, critical to our mission of building a high-quality library of questions and answers to practical programming problems.

No other changes are being made to the reputation system. Receiving downvotes on one of your questions will still reduce your reputation by the same amount as before. [Casting downvotes on questions is still "free"](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/90324/should-downvotes-on-questions-be-free), in the sense that it does not reduce the reputation of the voter.

You can find [more detailed background information in my answer here](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/391248), including a review of the history and an assessment of the facts that justify this change.

The biggest immediate change will be a substantial increase in user reputation scores, and thus an increase in the number of users having [certain privileges](https://stackoverflow.com/privileges).

As with far too many events of late, this change has been accompanied by a fair amount of drama. The proposed policy modifications were privately announced to community moderators by staff members some time back. Unfortunately, a less-than-ethical member of the larger Stack Exchange moderator community leaked this private communication to the public, and did so in a rather sensationalist way. I want to commend the Stack Exchange employees both for soliciting feedback from moderators and for *listening* to that feedback. I would ask that the community please avoid dredging up old drama. Instead, focus on the facts of the announcement and the policy as it has actually been implemented.

To that end, if you have questions, concerns, comments, or other feedback about this change, please post it as an answer here. You can also express your sentiments silently by voting. As always, we ask that you keep your feedback constructive and respectful. Feedback from those who cannot comply with this requirement is subject to removal.