What is reputation?


Reputation is completely optional. Normal use of SF Answers — that is, asking and answering questions — does not require any reputation whatsoever.

Remember, SF Answers is run by you! If you want to help us run the site, you'll need reputation first. Reputation is a (very) rough measurement of how much the SF Answers community trusts you. Reputation is never given, it is earned by convincing other users that you know what you're talking about.

Here's how it works: if you post a good question or helpful answer, it will be voted up by your peers: you gain 10 reputation points. If you post something that's off topic or incorrect, it will be voted down: you lose 2 reputation points. You can earn up to 200 reputation per day, but no more. (Note that votes for any posts marked "community wiki" do not generate reputation.)

Amass enough reputation points and spunk will allow you to go beyond simply asking and answering questions:

15Vote up
15Flag offensive
15Post more than one link
15Post images
50Leave comments
100Vote down (costs 1 rep)
100Edit community wiki posts
100Post more than one question per 20 minutes
100Post more than one answer per 2 minutes
200Reduced advertising (by a factor of 2)
250Vote to close or reopen your questions
250Create new tags
500Retag questions
2000Edit other people's posts
3000Vote to close or reopen any questions
10000Delete closed questions
10000Access to moderation tools

At the high end of this reputation spectrum there is little difference between users with high reputation and moderators. That is very much intentional. We don't run do not run it. The community does.

What if I don't get a good answer?

In order to get good answers, you have to put some effort into the question. Edit your question to provide status and progress updates. Document your own continued efforts to answer your question. This will naturally bump your question and get more people interested in it.

If, after two days, you still don't have an answer you like, you can offer a bounty. Slice off a bit of your own hard-earned reputation -- anywhere from 50 to 500 -- and attach it to the question as a bounty. We'll even throw in 50 reputation to sweeten the deal. The bountied question will appear with a special icon in all question lists, and it will also be visible on the home page Featured tab.

Once initiated, the bounty period lasts seven days. If you mark an accepted answer, your bounty is awarded to the answerer (do note that accepted bounty answers are permanent and cannot be changed). If you do not accept an answer in seven days, the top voted answer will automatically become the accepted answer, and half your bounty will be awarded to that answer. You will always give up the amount of reputation specified in the bounty, so if you start a bounty, be sure to follow up and accept the best answer!

Of course, bounty awards, like all accepted answers, are immune to the daily reputation cap and community wiki mode.

Other people can edit my stuff?!

Like Wikipedia, this site is collaboratively edited. If you are not comfortable with the idea of your questions and answers being edited by other trusted users, this may not be the site for you.