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Shadow Wizard
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As per the privilege page you've linked:

Established users are those who have been participating on the site for a fair amount of time. They gain the following privileges.

  • They may view the vote counts on posts
  • An expanded usercard will show additional profile information

I think that sums it up pretty clearly, and there's further explanation for it too, on that same page.

The name "Established User" may sound a bit misleading. The fact is those are the only two privileges you get at 1000 reputation points.


As for your secondary question. When I got me a new privilege on Stack Overflow, I made sure to read the respective privilege page very carefully, and then try the features explained there. That question you've linked shows no such research effort, even when you were given the information on a silver platter. As an "Established User", you should be fairly familiar with the site, the controls, and where to get information regarding different topics.

Also, don't feel bad. Voting on meta sites is often a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the question.

As per the privilege page you've linked:

Established users are those who have been participating on the site for a fair amount of time. They gain the following privileges.

  • They may view the vote counts on posts
  • An expanded usercard will show additional profile information

I think that sums it up pretty clearly, and there's further explanation for it too, on that same page.

The name "Established User" may sound a bit misleading. The fact is those are the only two privileges you get at 1000 reputation points.


As for your secondary question. When I got me a new privilege on Stack Overflow, I made sure to read the respective privilege page very carefully, and then try the features explained there. That question you've linked shows no such research effort, even when you were given the information on a silver platter. As an "Established User", you should be fairly familiar with the site, the controls, and where to get information regarding different topics.

Also, don't feel bad. Voting on meta sites is often a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the question.

As per the privilege page you've linked:

Established users are those who have been participating on the site for a fair amount of time. They gain the following privileges.

  • They may view the vote counts on posts

I think that sums it up pretty clearly, and there's further explanation for it too, on that same page.

The name "Established User" may sound a bit misleading. The fact is those are the only two privileges you get at 1000 reputation points.


As for your secondary question. When I got me a new privilege on Stack Overflow, I made sure to read the respective privilege page very carefully, and then try the features explained there. That question you've linked shows no such research effort, even when you were given the information on a silver platter. As an "Established User", you should be fairly familiar with the site, the controls, and where to get information regarding different topics.

Also, don't feel bad. Voting on meta sites is often a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the question.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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As per the privilege pageprivilege page you've linked:

Established users are those who have been participating on the site for a fair amount of time. They gain the following privileges.

  • They may view the vote counts on posts
  • An expanded usercard will show additional profile information

I think that sums it up pretty clearly, and there's further explanation for it too, on that same page.

The name "Established User" may sound a bit misleading. The fact is those are the only two privileges you get at 1000 reputation points.


As for your secondary question. When I got me a new privilege on Stack Overflow, I made sure to read the respective privilege pageprivilege page very carefully, and then try the features explained there. That question you've linked shows no such research effort, even when you were given the information on a silver platter. As an "Established User", you should be fairly familiar with the site, the controls, and where to get information regarding different topics.

Also, don't feel bad. Voting on meta sites is often a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the questionVoting on meta sites is often a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the question.

As per the privilege page you've linked:

Established users are those who have been participating on the site for a fair amount of time. They gain the following privileges.

  • They may view the vote counts on posts
  • An expanded usercard will show additional profile information

I think that sums it up pretty clearly, and there's further explanation for it too, on that same page.

The name "Established User" may sound a bit misleading. The fact is those are the only two privileges you get at 1000 reputation points.


As for your secondary question. When I got me a new privilege on Stack Overflow, I made sure to read the respective privilege page very carefully, and then try the features explained there. That question you've linked shows no such research effort, even when you were given the information on a silver platter. As an "Established User", you should be fairly familiar with the site, the controls, and where to get information regarding different topics.

Also, don't feel bad. Voting on meta sites is often a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the question.

As per the privilege page you've linked:

Established users are those who have been participating on the site for a fair amount of time. They gain the following privileges.

  • They may view the vote counts on posts
  • An expanded usercard will show additional profile information

I think that sums it up pretty clearly, and there's further explanation for it too, on that same page.

The name "Established User" may sound a bit misleading. The fact is those are the only two privileges you get at 1000 reputation points.


As for your secondary question. When I got me a new privilege on Stack Overflow, I made sure to read the respective privilege page very carefully, and then try the features explained there. That question you've linked shows no such research effort, even when you were given the information on a silver platter. As an "Established User", you should be fairly familiar with the site, the controls, and where to get information regarding different topics.

Also, don't feel bad. Voting on meta sites is often a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the question.

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Madara's Ghost
  • 32.3k
  • 8
  • 71
  • 133

As per the privilege page you've linked:

Established users are those who have been participating on the site for a fair amount of time. They gain the following privileges.

  • They may view the vote counts on posts
  • An expanded usercard will show additional profile information

I think that sums it up pretty clearly, and there's further explanation for it too, on that same page.

The name "Established User" may sound a bit misleading. The fact is those are the only two privileges you get at 1000 reputation points.


As for your secondary question. When I got me a new privilege on Stack Overflow, I made sure to read the respective privilege page very carefully, and then try the features explained there. That question you've linked shows no such research effort, even when you were given the information on a silver platter. As an "Established User", you should be fairly familiar with the site, the controls, and where to get information regarding different topics.

Also, don't feel bad. Voting on meta sites is often a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the question.

As per the privilege page you've linked:

Established users are those who have been participating on the site for a fair amount of time. They gain the following privileges.

  • They may view the vote counts on posts
  • An expanded usercard will show additional profile information

I think that sums it up pretty clearly, and there's further explanation for it too, on that same page.

The name "Established User" may sound a bit misleading. The fact is those are the only two privileges you get at 1000 reputation points.


As for your secondary question. When I got me a new privilege on Stack Overflow, I made sure to read the respective privilege page very carefully, and then try the features explained there. That question you've linked shows no such research effort, even when you were given the information on a silver platter. As an "Established User", you should be fairly familiar with the site, the controls, and where to get information regarding different topics.

Also, don't feel bad. Voting on meta sites is a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the question.

As per the privilege page you've linked:

Established users are those who have been participating on the site for a fair amount of time. They gain the following privileges.

  • They may view the vote counts on posts
  • An expanded usercard will show additional profile information

I think that sums it up pretty clearly, and there's further explanation for it too, on that same page.

The name "Established User" may sound a bit misleading. The fact is those are the only two privileges you get at 1000 reputation points.


As for your secondary question. When I got me a new privilege on Stack Overflow, I made sure to read the respective privilege page very carefully, and then try the features explained there. That question you've linked shows no such research effort, even when you were given the information on a silver platter. As an "Established User", you should be fairly familiar with the site, the controls, and where to get information regarding different topics.

Also, don't feel bad. Voting on meta sites is often a measurement for agreement, not usefullness of the question.

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Madara's Ghost
  • 32.3k
  • 8
  • 71
  • 133
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