I know this topic is not new and the downvoting in general is addressed in:
Why do you lose reputation for down-voting? - In essence to encourage up-voting, and avoid malfeasance. I would point out though that that post is 3 1/2 years old - when Stack Overflow was only "a couple of months old" !
I am finding that, as an experienced SO user, sometimes I would be tempted to down-vote so that we have the best questions and answers possible. But I care about my points as do most of us and so I (sometimes) think, why bother with the loss of a point and I move on.
Given all the 'rules' that can be applied -a certain number of points, or a certain badge and/or a certain number per day, it seems that, for experienced users, down-voting really ADDS value to the question and helps make the right answers stay at the top.
As with other senior level privileges, we trust that users that reach those levels would not run around 'downvoting everything in sight".
One feature that I would suggest, if this was implemented, would be that you cannot 'upvote' and 'downvote' on different answers within a question, or maybe you can but that's when you get the penalty point, because if you have up-voted an answer, there is a little bit of an implied "mini down-vote" of all the other answers, given that you can only accept one.
Maybe the negative point goes away at 10,000 points but you still have only 2 down votes per day. That compares to the 50 total votes... Or only 2 down-votes without penalty (though that seems a little bit of a overly complicated rule).
There's a lot of ways this can be done and I'm sure others have good solutions.
The essence remains that it just seems unnecessary sometimes to an experienced user and it means we lose some potential 'value' that could be added.
