I have noticed that I can now share my answer on Facebook and Twitter, but I only have my friends on my Facebook and Twitter accounts, so surely by me sharing an answer I'm encouraging ring voting?

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There's a difference between BEHOLD, the awesomeness of this answer I just wrote on a decent question and Psst, hey .. Bugsy Mugsy and Clyde .. go up vote this on the hush hush. – Tim Post Dec 21 '11 at 8:51
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I thought the whole point of sharing the links was to get up-votes for the awesome answer I'd just posted ;) – ChrisF Dec 21 '11 at 11:20
Does the "boy howdy, these users sure upvote each other a lot" algorithm know about that difference, @TimPost? – Popular Demand Dec 21 '11 at 14:07
@PopularDemand For almost three years, certain users have been beating me to answering interesting questions in the C tag. When they do, I typically up vote them, and it has yet to be an issue. I do up-vote a lot of different people, not just people I know from using the site for so long. However, the innards of the algorithms are unknown even to us. – Tim Post Dec 21 '11 at 14:10
Fair enough. I feel like I've had some downvotes taken away on MSO in cases where I just frequently and honestly disagree with certain users' feature requests. Of course, by the time I think it's happening, it's too late to collect data. @TimPost – Popular Demand Dec 21 '11 at 14:18
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2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

I'll elaborate a bit on my comment.

Our users are very good at bringing completely crap answers with an inordinate amount of up-votes to our attention, which sometimes leads to uncovering and breaking up voting rings.

That being said, you aren't just promoting yourself by sharing an answer. You're promoting the fact that you made the site a little bit more awesome than it was, which means you're also promoting the site. Bragging about the ownership you took in something is one of the best ways that something can be promoted.

By design, we reward great contributions with reputation, so I really don't see a possible negative there. I think that most people would not be inclined to share something that they didn't feel good about.

If you have a long standing track record of quality, there is no reason for a moderator to ever look at (or care about) voting patterns to and from your account. If you write something like this:

u can jst fix it like my bro did in dis blog post

... and it is subsequently up voted, I'm going to take a hard look at your account.

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It seems like a two-edged sword: If the up-votes are warranted, I see little harm. If not, other respected contributors may be more likely to evaluate the answer critically. Should a pattern emerge, the result could be a worse reputation.

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