> 1. Is that thing always set at 10 reputation? Yep. > 2. Any chance for trusted user or diamond mod to choose it a little higher, say 100 or 1000? This is likely to be an unpopular opinion, but I'm uncomfortable with the idea of providing this functionality. In fact, I'm uncomfortable with the fact that the ability to "protect" questions on Stack Overflow exists at all. People who aren't established Stack Overflow users are perfectly capable in principle of giving excellent answers to popular questions that are superior to all those currently posted, and I don't like the fact that we turn away such potential contributions, or gatekeep the ability to provide them until the user wastes their time answering some random piece of garbage from the front page to hit the rep threshold. Probably newbies are somewhat more likely to provide bad answers to popular questions, but it's hardly the case that *only* newbies do so, and I don't like making the ability of a new arrival to make a meaningful contribution contingent on them doing some meaningless drudge-work in a community that they are by definition not yet invested in. I *certainly* don't think we should increase the minimum bar to something that requires days of work. I worry that our existing system of question protection may have alienated some readers who had potential to turn into valuable contributors, and that if that's the case, we'll never know about it. I worry that making the hurdle that has to be cleared even higher will exacerbate that effect. Also, protection is used kind of capriciously. It's been remarked on Meta before that a large fraction of protected questions (I forget the exact number) have *never* received an answer that protecting the question would've been prevented, prior to protection being applied. Meanwhile, some questions garner dozens of garbage answers without getting protected. While it's not a huge deal, I find the capriciousness distasteful; I'd rather our handling of popular questions was more clearly principled. > Mysteriously, those late answers can somehow gather many upvotes even if they are not adding any useful content, they're sometimes even voted up when obviously incorrect, so there remains incentive to add answers and the usual quality controls of downvotes and delvotes are not proving adequate. *This* is the root of the problem here, to my mind, and well-stated. It is (obviously) not a problem by itself that new users can answer popular questions; it only becomes problematic because, for some reason - and I find it as mysterious as you - voting spectacularly fails to punish bad answers (whether from newbies or otherwise) to popular questions. I'm not sure what the solution to this is, but I can think of a few, some cultural and some platform changes: * Encourage dedicated users who are willing to do so to look over *all* the answers when they read a highly-viewed question, and downvote/delete the duds * Make votes on multiple answers to the same question only count as one vote for the purpose of the daily vote limit, so that the point above is *actually possible* to do on questions with >40 bad answers without spreading the work over multiple days. * Restrict Late Answer reviews on highly-viewed questions to >10k users, who have delete votes and are likely to be more aggressive about downvoting * Build community tooling (or maybe add onto Smoke Detector, if appropriate - I'm not familiar with the bots) to highlight new answers to highly-viewed old questions for scrutiny - like the Late Answer review queue, but more focussed on high-view questions. I prefer the idea of these remedies to your proposal of enhancing protection, because: * they sidestep the capriciousness of protection decisions, using some threshold number of views as the basis for applying greater scrutiny instead of the whims of a high-rep user * they're non-discriminatory against new users * they also enable us to combat bad answers to popular questions from users with thousands of rep (which I have certainly seen). Honestly - and again, I don't foresee this being a popular opinion - if it were up to me, I'd favour scrapping the whole "protected" system entirely. I think there are more effective ways, like those I propose, of solving the problem that question protection is designed to solve, and that those ways would also inflict less collateral damage. I think if anyone's going to spend effort in that area, they should spend it shifting the whole paradigm by which we tackle the problem, from one of preemptively disempowering a class of users who we *speculate* might post bad content, to finding ways to direct curatorial effort to potential bad content so we can deal with it - no matter how much rep its author had.