It is incredibly rare that I down-vote on this or any other community site. I would rather just ignore the item. However, occasionally some very bad advice is given that is worthy of a down vote. Why should this adversely affect the reputation of the down-voter?
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Aug 20 '09 at 19:16
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The motivation behind it is to put emphasis on up-voting or not voting at all. This way, down votes will carry more weight and it will also prevent users from abusing the system by down-voting excessively. According to what Jeff/Joel discussed on the SO podcast, they wanted to find a way to discourage users from down-voting for less legitimate reasons (say a pro-Java developer down-voting everything remotely related to .NET or the like). Edit: I have to admit, it definitely puts it into perspective to compare how many points you gain for other activities vs. the 1 point you lose for a down vote. It is effectively the smallest penalty that the Stack Overflow scoring system will permit. Also, it may not be the best possible approach, but one has to start somewhere. Besides, the site is only a couple of months old. |
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So you will think twice before doing it. |
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I like the idea. It keeps people from mass down voting for the sake of down voting, since you yourself take a penalty for the action. |
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It seems reasonable to me. You're limited to a certian number of down-votes a day anyway, right? If you're contributing positively to the site at all, then I doubt you'd notice the change in your reputation. |
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So how is that different than somebody voting up indiscriminately? Instead of the java developer voting down everything .NET, you have the java developer voting up everything Java. I also don't see how marking something wrong down should degrade your reputation when you are doing the community a favor. Maybe you should just get a "curmudgeon" badge. While I see the simple votes as easy to understand, I'd rather see something like badges for answers. That way you could have things like "verified" where the voter had a choice like "I have implemented this answer and it works for me", Or "incorrect" where the choice was "I have tried this answer and it does not appear to work". |
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I often wonder if -2 off the person your down-voting is enough. Maybe it should be -10 to equal the amount they might get off an up-vote. I only say this as one user could have got one down-vote and one up-vote which would still equate to +8 rep points for them. (Even though their vote score would still be at zero). Of course I understand that -10 might seem excessive, I’m just looking at a view point of balancing the rep when it comes to up-votes and down-votes. Keeping it to -1 for the person who originally cast the down-vote but giving -10 to the person who's been given that down-vote might seem fairer to some, and make it more acceptable when losing some rep to down-vote a bad post/answer. EDIT: I do believe that down-voting should be kept to a minimum and only used when really neccessary. |
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My guess is that it is to make you think twice, is it really worth 2 whole reputation points to mark this as bad or should I just ignore it. It seems to work quite effectivly. Free down-votes would probably result in a habitual down-voting of mostly anything that someone doesn't agree with, a small penalty lessens that tendcy. |
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It also seems reasonable to me. I've only downvoted once, and that was on a truly bad answer. (I've been downvoted at least three times, and I think four, and I understand why on most of them ... ) The one-point penalty is a "keep-it-honest" deal. Downvote for something BAD, but not just because you don't like it. |
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I know it's a deterrent to stop people abusing the system but it still seems unfair to loose reputation for pointing out a rubbish reply / question. I for one won't ever vote anyone down now which probably isn't a good thing? SA |
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I'm not sure whether the down-voting feature was really well thought out. On one side, Jeff praises the possibility of downvoting as a very valuable feature. On the other hand, you are discouraged from down-voting because you lose almost as much reputation as the user being downvoted. |
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I dunno, if I really disliked what someone did in real life, I might cut off a piece of myself and through it at them. |
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I'll admit to being annoyed about something in the SOverse and thinking "I'd like to downvote that". The cost associated with that helps me keep things in perspective. Nothing has yet been worth the downvote. I should also note that when you don't have much in the way of rep to start with the cost of a downvote is proportionately far greater than for someone with a lot of rep. This favours having high-rep users as the ones who do the downvoting - which is in line with the basic idea of rep IMO. |
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One point would be, to avoid excessive use of it. You should only down vote if it is a bad post. One Rep-Point is not much but it makes some think twice before spending it ;) |
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It's a deterrent to some users who might otherwise down-vote indiscriminately. I think most people would down-vote only rarely regardless, but there are some who might want to use down-voting to penalize other users for having a different opinion, for using the wrong language, for having too much rep, etc. |
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Because they didn't think before implementing this reputation system. They just wanted the project to look new and different. The point of being effective as well got somehow lost on the way. |
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You are only spending one point to down-vote a bad answer/question. You get 10 points for a good answer/question. As long as you don't down-vote all the time, it will not really effect your reputation. |
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