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BrenBarn
  • Member for 12 years, 6 months
  • Last seen more than a month ago
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Why are newly asked bad questions marked as favorite by someone?
I sometimes favorite questions that are amusingly bad, because I find them amusing.
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Can we make this meta site work for mentoring?
I think this general idea is great. An explicit mechanism for experienced users to directly help inexperienced users with formulating their questions could do wonders.
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Why aren't moderation tools given to people with a history of good moderation?
@Mysticial: Yeah, I was wondering about that, among other things. I just grabbed the first query I found on Data SE that was a good approximation.
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Why aren't moderation tools given to people with a history of good moderation?
I made some quick graphs based on this data query: #1 / #2 / #3 . It does appear that higher-rep users have higher rep-per-answer than lower-rep users, although Eric Lippert is at the top end for his rep range. Still unclear whether rep farmers lose the rep race, or just get bored and stop trying.
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Why aren't moderation tools given to people with a history of good moderation?
@RobertHarvey: Impressive, yes, but my question is whether there is concrete data demonstrating that this is a consistent pattern, not just examples of people who have lots of rep with relatively few answers. For instance, the two users just above and below Eric Lippert in total rep (here and here) have far lower average rep per answer. Not saying that's good or bad, just wondering if anyone has tried to assess your claim systematically (for instance using data.stackexchange.com).
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Why aren't moderation tools given to people with a history of good moderation?
"Those kinds of answers always win against the correct, but average answers over the long haul." That is an interesting claim. Is there any concrete evidence for it? I agree that more thorough answers will win over average answers when they go head-to-head on the same question, but because basic questions are far more common, it seems that giving average answers to frequent questions can generate more total rep over time.
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Is the Current "Bounty System" favoring only "accurate" answers?
Question: Is it not currently possible for a single user to award multiple bounties for different answers to the same question? This would require the user to donate more rep, but if they're motivated by gratitude for good answers, they might be willing to do so.
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Is the Current "Bounty System" favoring only "accurate" answers?
@RetoKoradi: Maybe, but what he's suggesting is that the bounty not (or not necessarily) be offered for "the best answer", but just for useful answers, with the bounty-awarded deciding how to allocate the bounty.