Currently, when rep is changed due to the removal of another user account (to undo the rep gain/loss that happened when they up-/down-voted/accepted/were downvoted by you), the associated message is simply "User was removed". I am not the only one who found that message rather cryptic (I had to go search meta when I saw it, and I found my answer in a duplicate, so that makes me at least the 3rd person to not understand it).

I think it's a good idea to add a link to the relevant meta answer or some more descriptive text to that.

Edit: e.g.

Another user was removed; reputation changes linked to the user's activity were reverted.

(I can see how it's hard to fully explain the event succinctly, that's why a "what is this?" link to meta or an FAQ question/answer might be better.)

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Maybe a description like "User account was deleted" would be better? – Robert Harvey Apr 23 '12 at 18:35
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Something like "A user (and their votes) was removed"? – Matthew Read Apr 23 '12 at 18:39
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Or better and shorter "Voter's account was removed" – Matthew Read Apr 23 '12 at 18:50
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@RobertHarvey That is almost equally ambiguous. Maybe something closer to my suggestion in the edit. – trutheality Apr 23 '12 at 18:50
@MatthewRead That isn't entirely true though, because it could be undoing rep gained from accepting an answer, or rep lost from you downvoting their answer. – trutheality Apr 23 '12 at 18:52
Hmm, good point. – Matthew Read Apr 23 '12 at 19:01
@trutheality - accepts are basically just a special case of voting though. – Flexo Apr 23 '12 at 19:26
@awoodland Even if we consider accepting a special case of voting, the acceptor gets rep -- you could be the "voter" who "voted" for the now-deleted user (losing the 2 rep you gained from accepting their answer). – trutheality Apr 23 '12 at 19:30
@trutheality - if you were the one doing the accepting you won't lose any rep - I don't think removed users automatically have all their posts/questions removed, at least not for some cases of removal. – Flexo Apr 23 '12 at 19:31
@awoodland Good point. Maybe "voter" would be appropriate after all. – trutheality Apr 23 '12 at 20:02
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I would add something like "[x] upvotes on your posts were reverted due to user being removed" as the tooltip. – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Apr 24 '12 at 7:50
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@ShaDowWizArd - that's not quite correct either, since it could be an answer of theirs you downvoted that was removed, netting you +1 for example... – Nick Craver Apr 24 '12 at 10:24
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@NickCraver do a user's answers get removed with the account? – trutheality Apr 24 '12 at 19:14
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Just to chime in, I also finally searched here to find out what that meant. – Ed S. Jun 9 '12 at 17:59
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I'd like to at least know what the question or answer was. – martineau Jul 28 '12 at 7:09
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6 Answers

The first thing that came to my mind was that that it was my answer to the question "User was removed" that earned me -10. I actually searched on SO to find that question. The second thing that confused me: what user was removed? And why do I care is a user was removed?

A link, calculation, description is probably not required but the message needs to be re-phrased (sorry I cannot figure out the appropriate message either).

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Edit: Based on the other answers, it would seem that the main problem is that people do not know that votes from deleted users are rolled back. I belive that the most logical solution is to make that clearer.

What about changing the message to something like "Upvoter user was removed and reputation was revoked" and add a link to the originaly upvoted item? That way the message should be clearer and we can also provide the user with a reference to the answer/question that triggered the recalc. The idea from justin answer could also be used - having a link to a wiki article explaining why the votes were rolled back would probably help in resolving the confusion.

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+1. Providing a link to a wiki/explanation of the action and the question(s) affected by the removal would go a long way towards reducing confusion. – Leigh Sep 10 '12 at 3:07

I would suggest that the message be linked to a reason as of why the user was removed, what user was removed, or perhaps just a link in meta-wiki stating what the event is in full. Everything else in the reputation system has a link, so a small link would help confused users like me. I had to do a Google Search to find it, which took me out of the site to another site (Google) and than back to this question.

I agree, link it to a help file or meta-wiki.

On a side note, does this happen often? Users and their votes getting removed? Maybe the meta-wiki page should state why this is a common occurrence.

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I like the idea of linking to an informational page. However, providing who the user was or why the user was removed is not possible. Perhaps the serial voting lines could link to their appropriate meta-wiki as well? – animuson May 9 '12 at 16:23
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I agree. A link is needed. – Handprint Aug 14 '12 at 14:03
Is this a common event? – Justin Oct 10 '12 at 13:11
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What I would like to see is information describing just what "User was removed" means. I don't need to know who it was, and I don't need to know why they were removed, but would like to see a description on the lines of "The user(s) who caused you to gain increased reputation has been removed from the system. As a result, their actions have been undone, and so your reputation has had to be lowered accordingly." – PJC Nov 13 '12 at 14:08

I think that the revoking of points kind of leaves the message lost anyway. Why should the points be revoked.

Normally a person will upvote an answer, or a question if they found it useful. Why simply because a person who found your answer or question useful being deleted (for whatever reason), should the points weighting whether the question or answer useful be revoked?

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Because removed users are more likely to be introducing stupid votes, I guess; random downvotes or malicious/spiteful downvotes should be revoked, as should sock-puppet upvotes. It's just too hard to say what to keep and what to remove. I don't like it, but it makes some sense. – Craig Ringer Nov 16 '12 at 3:20

I keep being notified of replies to my (FAQ) answer about this, and users frequently complain that they didn't understand the message, or worse that they thought it was their own account in danger. Here's the most recent such comment as an example:

I could care less about the rep gain or loss, but when you have a loss it is a scary message without context. I honestly thought for a moment that my account had been inhibited in some way. No, it didn't say "Your account was removed." Still, there is that moment of "what did I do wrong?" which seems silly to cause simply by not posting a few extra words. A clearer "A user who voted on your posts was removed along with reputation changes they caused" would have gone a long way to not cause me to question my participation in the review queues as of late. – Godeke

I understand that we don't want to draw attention to user removal, but by being unclear the current message is drawing more attention, not less.

What is gained by being unclear and confusing users? Please make a change.

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I think User was removed is a simple answer and its not hard to understand at all.
So there is no need to provide any links etc for it.
And more description is not helpful when we can say the same thing in less word more accurately.

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From my perspective, as a advanced user who uses multiple web services it was a very cryptic message. It needs some alteration or something to help users quickly understand what happened. Since the most common is the removal of rep. I want to make sure I didn't do anything to cause this to happen. – Justin May 1 '12 at 20:24

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