I have observed that there are a lot of ninja responders when a new question was asked by a user. The given answers there are of very poor quality and often very general. The procedure is always the same. The responder tries as quickly as possible to give an (short) answer without looking at the post quality. The intention is to potentially be the first person whose answer will be accepted (or the first attention is paid on) only to gain maximum reputation. However, shortly afterwards, this response is then modified several times, so that this answer will not be voted down or is replaced by a better response from another person. This approach has several drawbacks for the whole community I think. It discourages a potential responder to make the work to write a detailed response, as these after they have written the detailed answer, just one of many who have given more or less the same answer, but just with the disadvantage that their response hardly will find attention by others. It seems to be so that the rating for answers which once were up-voted, are rarely changed again even if there are answers with better quality (my subjective opinion). My idea would be now to punish these people who behave as described, since their main intention seems to be the mere attainment of reputation. How could this punishment looks like and how detect such behavior? I think this is not easy. One idea would be to detect if a given answer has been modified **n** times right after composing it. Another idea would be to detect if the answer has been modified much right after composing either by detecting size change more than half for example. Ideas for punishment would be: 1. Don't allow up-voting for **n** hours 2. Don't allow to be accepted for **n** hours 3. Responder will only gain half the reputation for "accepted" or "up-voted" 4. Responder will not gain any reputation for this answer 5. To be discussed... This punishment system should prevent exploiting the reputation system and help to improve answers. I'm open for any ideas, may be I'm wrong with my observation? This proposal may be **a bit** related to this post https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/261727/proposal-for-an-approval-system-for-questions *I've also found myself in this behavior, I would not want to just point the finger at others.* Should this question be closed? I think it does not only discuss the quality of answers as article *https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/253862/is-it-all-right-to-flag-very-new-answer-as-very-low-quality* does, but it should be a point for discussion if this behavior is a problem or if we should support or tolerate such behavior, and if not what we could do to stop it. It has some relations with *https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/269993/placeholder-answers-will-update-with-answer-soon*, but there no punishment system is suggested. There are mostly helpful comments, and one commenter has a remarkable solution which addresses one side of the problem (preventing others from answering questions). Answers should not be visible within first **N** minutes. This however doesn't solve the problem of ninja responders. Another solution I could imagine is to encourage more users to downvote answers. My idea would be to allow edits, but make these edits visible only after 15 minutes (maybe longer the time each time a modification was made), so that others are able to judge the initial quality of the answer. Another question is, should we tolerate this FGITW behavior? If this would be real life you would be pissed off! Imagine: you are sending your car for repair to a car service station. One hour after repair you will get your car returned and have to pay certain amount of money. But right after you drove home you'll notice that the car has still some issues. You will send the car to the car service station again and again. Would you like to tolerate this? It also ends up in a repaired car, but it took a long time for it. This algorithm of course need to be transparent; no invisible line that are suddenly crossed. I could imagine something like a warning "**If you edit this post within 5 minutes you are not eligible for reputation in the next 30 minutes**" or so. The real big question here is: Do we want to change anything or do we all participate in this game? Like politicians raising their financial compensation for themselves.