I just noticed that I lost a bunch of points from my reputation score on Stack Overflow, and I used the "reputation" tab on my user profile page to try and track down the cause.

During my investigation, I noticed there was an unusual event of type "reversal". In the normal place of a question title, it says "serial upvoting reversed".

Yesterday, I lost 172 reputation points when "serial upvoting [was] reversed"

What does this mean, and what caused it? Did I do something wrong?

And why did I lose all of that reputation? Is the system punishing me for leaving too many good answers? Is there any way to earn it back?

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1 Answer

up vote 97 down vote accepted

What is voting fraud?

Voting fraud is when a single user continually upvotes many of your posts within a short period of time. This is not considered normal behavior and the system will not allow it. If it continues to happen between two certain IP addresses (voting each other up) or from a single user, or looks just plain suspicious in general, moderators and/or developers may investigate the matter and disciplinary action may be taken against the users involved with the fraud.

When does serial upvoting occur?

Most often when you get unexpectedly serial upvoted, believe it or not, it's just a user trying to give you extra reputation. They saw a post of yours that was extraordinarily helpful to them and they feel that going through your posts systematically and upvoting them is the appropriate way of granting you additional reputation (apparently they've forgotten about the bounty system).

Occasionally, it also occurs between two users who have made an agreement to upvote each other, or between one user and a sock puppet account trying to game the system for extra reputation (which will often lead to suspension).

When does serial downvoting occur?

Pretty much any time serial downvoting occurs is when a user disagrees with something another user has posted, either as an answer or comment. The user then visits their profile and, like with serial upvoting, systematically visits their posts and downvotes them. Occasionally other reasons for this occurring will prevail, like a joke being played on the user.

What if I think I'm the victim of voting fraud?

If the voting fraud is in the progress of happening or just happened recently, don't worry about it. You should wait at least 24 hours after noticing before becoming concerned. The system should detect it and reverse it for you. Please do not try to get help on this issue on meta or by flagging for a moderator. All they will do is tell you to wait for the voting fraud script to run (they won't run it just for you just this once).

If you're curious whether your specific case is actually voting fraud (from a single user), you can go visit the Tavern on the Meta and ask a moderator there to check for you (again, they won't fix it). They can confirm whether or not you can expect the script to catch it. If the 24 hours has already passed and you don't feel like waiting in chat, you can then flag one of your posts and explain what happened so a moderator can look into it or post a new question on meta to get feedback and explanations.

How does the system detect voting fraud?

Every night around 03:00 UTC, a voting fraud detection script is run that looks for patterns such as these. It basically looks for users who have upvoted another user many times. The number is fairly low within a given amount of time (the exact mechanics are kept secret). When the system detects this pattern, all of the votes cast from that user to the user affected are reversed and it prints a "serial upvoting/downvoting reversed" statement in the affected user's reputation history to indicate what has occurred.

Does the system detect voting fraud in deleted posts?

As of now, vote reversal script involves deleted posts:

the vote invalidation does trigger on deleted posts. Don't take it personally - the script is dumb and can't tell your intent or judge the quality of the posts. (quote source: Prog.SE Whiteboard)

A regular user may notice this "feature" when one finds a spam post, checks spammer account, then discovers and downvotes a series of "answers" having the same canned spam content. Even if all the posts are flagged and further removed, some time later one can find a series of +1 undownvote entries in their reputation tab marked by time when vote reversal script typically runs (example).

Why don't I get to keep the reputation?

The reputation was removed because it is not proper behavior and it is not allowed. The votes were completely invalidated by the system and thus the reputation gain from them was also invalidated. The only way you can gain this reputation back is to go post some more and get some legitimate upvotes on those posts.

Should I be concerned about reversal statements on my profile?

No, not at all. It's only an indication of reputation change. After all, we can't control the actions of other users. It's very rare where we'd run across a user who was committing the voting fraud themselves on their own account, and in most instances of that, they will have already been dealt with accordingly. You should in no way be concerned with reversal statements in your reputation history.

Serial upvoting has caused me to exceed the daily reputation cap, so I can't earn reputation from other legitimate upvotes. Will I get this reputation back?

Yes. Once serial upvotes have been reversed, your reputation will be recalculated as if the serial votes had never happened at all.

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38  
Or maybe (just maybe) a user looked at your profile and decided to look at your questions/answers and really likes your contributions. But nawww, no one would EVER do this. – Thomas Eding Apr 23 '12 at 19:36
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Do users that are flagged as serial up voters get a helpful blip explaining the bounty system ( perhaps time delayed from the event or vaguely worded so as to not guide the minority that are trying to game the system how to avoid detection )? – bmike May 1 '12 at 13:59
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@bmike No, users who have their votes invalidated from serial voting (either up or down) are not notified, unless a moderator elects to do so manually. But, what you suggest sounds like a good idea. I suggest opening up a meta question tagged [feature-request] to suggest it. – Cody Gray May 3 '12 at 8:17
That FAQ doesn't cover meta.stackoverflow.com/a/64255/6309 (upvote every two-three seconds) – VonC May 11 '12 at 11:49
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What happens in the case that somebody creates a puppet account and serial upvotes a user they dont like. Will that user be penalized (as it would appear to the system that they are trying to game the system for rep)? – n00b Oct 23 '12 at 18:22
@droid interesting question but to make it a convincing sock puppet you'd probably have to be on the same network as the intended victim – Basic Nov 22 '12 at 11:59
@Basic that implies that if someone creates an account off the network (e.g. the library) they can successfully game the system by up voting themselves from the puppet account. Being off the network is not convincing criteria. – n00b Nov 25 '12 at 4:20
@droid: There is no automatic penalty, ever, for serial voting reversals. All cases of serial voting have to be reviewed manually, as every situation is unique. There's really no standard for "this is what will happen if you serial vote in this way." – animuson Nov 25 '12 at 4:41
@animuson - Can someone vote the same post again after his/her serial upvotes/downvotes are reversed? – hims056 Dec 24 '12 at 5:57
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@hims056: Yes, you can. The reversal script acts just like undoing the vote yourself. You are still capable of re-casting the vote later like normal voting. – animuson Dec 24 '12 at 6:45
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I object to the term 'fraud' for serial voting. No one is lying. They are violating a policy, but their violation does not constitute fraud. – Rosinante Jan 9 at 12:26
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@Rosinante Of course it's fraudulent. This is a community with an implicit social contract that you're voting on an answer, not whether you like the author. Serial upvoting or downvoting subverts that reasonable communal intent to work a personal agenda. It's a dishonest misrepresentation of what the vote means. – Nicole Hamilton Jan 24 at 20:43
What an intelligent AI! – Popopo Mar 26 at 14:46
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Well, I definitely DO follow a pattern that matches the "serial upvoting" thing. Reading some great answer I look at the author, and the page has a list of answers, that naturally drag my attention, and reading them I apply votes. NOT for reputation or of gratitude, but because the answer deserves it. I really hope the magic script has some balance to make distinction of this, IMNSHO most straightforward use of the site from fraud. – Balog Pal Jun 6 at 2:36
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@NicoleHamilton: Great answers correlate as they are being tied by the same great author. Some people just know their business and/or learned to speak when it's right. SE is supposedly a place to attract them -- how come it's implied to be fraudulent rather than natural? – Balog Pal Jun 6 at 2:43

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