It seems I have lost 5 reputation points on Stack Overflow yesterday. The reason given in my history is "removed". On mouse over I get the message "user was removed". I don't understand what that means. What caused this?

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A user who voted for one of your posts had their account deleted (either by choice or due to violating the network's Terms of Service). As a result, all of their votes were undone, and the rep you gained from them (or lost because of them) was revoked.

Many users find this behaviour irritating, and are voicing their disapproval in this Question. (The rep loss isn't new, but people weren't aware of it because it wasn't listed in your rep history until recently.)

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6  
Actually he upvoted one of the questions as answer upvote gives 10 points, not 5. Also worth to mention that this behavior (reputation loss due to removed users) was always going on, but just recently it became visible due to the new reputation history. – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Mar 22 '12 at 8:02
86  
that's dumb, you shouldn't be punished because someone else got punished =| – Justin Kirk Apr 18 '12 at 18:25
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I gained points because a user who had downvoted my post got removed - so don't forget that this feature goes both ways. – Tim Apr 19 '12 at 6:47
15  
I think they look at it if they gave you 'false' reputation points because there actions weren't agreeable, so you can't rely on your points associated with them. Like having a fake reference on your resume. – rd42 Apr 19 '12 at 18:49
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Just got here for the same reason. At the very least, when this happens to someone, a notification or message should be sent to their box explaining why. My first interpretation was that I was the user who was removed! – sparc_spread Jun 13 '12 at 14:21
6  
I had 60 points taken away from me this way just a few minutes ago. I don't see what a user quitting or being removed for violation of the rules has to do with the validity of votes be they upvotes or downvotes. – Michael Chernick Jun 26 '12 at 21:48
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I think it'd help if instead of it being listed as red to indicate 'downvotes' it could be maybe...orange? And perhaps labeled more as "user was removed and points gained or received were reset" or something like that. – DA. Jun 29 '12 at 5:54
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If the user asked to be removed, why not let the points stay? If SO removed them for a violation, I understand. Either way, it's not earth shattering, more of a curiosity. – octopusgrabbus Jun 29 '12 at 16:56
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I just simply wished the explanation on the reputation page was better. Seems like I shouldn't have had to come to the meta section to figure this out. – Rikon Jul 15 '12 at 21:40
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It actually makes perfect sense. If SO didn't do this, everyone could create lots of 'fake' accounts and upvote all their own answers and questions. – iconoclast Aug 30 '12 at 19:50
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It must be better to show "User <username> was removed". For a moment I just thought that I was removed :-( – eeerahul Sep 13 '12 at 5:16
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Same as many other respondents (just to "vote for" their remarks): 1. the information should be better. I lost 10 points yesterday by "user removed" and assumed that I was the one being removed, leaving me wondering why and feeling somewhat embarrassed. 2. I agree that a user who is removed for 'misbehaviour' of some kine should be invalidated retroactively, including the points they've caused one way or the other. However, the point-assignments from a user who simply withdraws from the forum should be regarded as valid, also after he's left our community. – Bert te Velde Sep 16 '12 at 5:35
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"Many users find this behaviour irritating" lol isn't that obvious? @Tim that's not the point, the point is it should not affect your reputation anyway, it does not make sense, a particular user at certain point did upvote/downvote coz he/she felt so, how does his/her opinion go away with deleting account is beyond me. – vin Oct 12 '12 at 12:15
18  
The recalc policy is fine. But the red mark and "user was removed" looks cryptic and unnecessarily negative--especially since the only user name mentioned on a profile is one's own. So the natural impulse is to bind "user" to the account you're looking at. (It was jarring to me and I could tell what it meant, but still this could be clearer.) I agree that orange is better than red and ideally all of these things would have hyperlinks to a help page (or at least a meta post) explaining what the deal is. – HostileFork Nov 6 '12 at 22:16
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A person is voted to become a president. If the voter dies, is the vote taken back? – Anoop Vaidya Apr 8 at 10:02
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