Since the idea seems to have been well-received, I've turned this feature on. Feel free to log out and verify that it works... So how will we know if this has had any positive effects? Here's some baseline data on questions from [new users][1]: week Questions Bad Good PctNewUserQuestionsBad ------------- --------- --- ---- ---------------------- 2013-07-22 364 147 217 40.38 2013-07-29 382 179 203 46.86 2013-08-05 352 163 189 46.31 2013-08-12 361 166 195 45.98 2013-08-19 400 196 204 49 2013-08-26 432 178 254 41.2 2013-09-02 453 189 264 41.72 2013-09-09 389 171 218 43.96 2013-09-16 410 189 221 46.1 2013-09-23 386 159 227 41.19 ![New user question quality graph][2] ...Where again, a "bad" question is one that was closed, deleted (by someone other than the author) or down-voted below 0. If we can get the % to drop significantly without seriously hurting the number of *good* questions, we'll call this a success. Don't let me forget to come back in a couple weeks and run this query again... --- ###Addendum: bad questions broken down by author reputation This deserves a closer look at some point in the future, but I want to drop a note in here to address Iain's concern that any approach targeting only [new users][1] - that is, folks who've yet to earn at least 10 reputation points OR a network association bonus - is missing the mark. Using the same criteria for "bad" as above, I divided all of the bad questions asked during the past 90 days into buckets according to the reputation of the author *at the time they were asked* (questions are bucketed by rounding author rep down to the nearest multiple of 100): Reputation rounded down to the nearest 100 BadQuestions ------------------------------------------ ------------ 0 2630 100 926 200 70 300 45 400 26 500 11 600 15 700 19 800 6 900 5 1000 9 1100 10 1200 2 1300 3 1400 2 1500 3 1800 1 1900 2 2200 1 2400 5 2500 5 2800 1 3100 1 3500 1 4000 1 4100 1 4300 1 31800 1 More interestingly, only 415 "bad" questions were asked during this time period by folks whose only reputation came from the association bonus, compared to 2630 questions from folks who AT THE TIME THEY POSTED THE QUESTION would've been classified as [new users][1]. Whether or not this is particular change is a useful strategy, I'm at least confident that we are targeting the right group of users. [1]: http://serverfault.com/help/privileges/new-user [2]: https://i.sstatic.net/HfApg.png