I understand the purpose of up/downvoting answers -- some answers are better than others, some answers may be wrong, .etc. With regard to questions, though, there are other mechanisms to deal with "bad" questions: comments, close, flag. A poorly written question should be improved. A bad question should be closed/deleted.

Often, though I see poorly written questions downvoted. I'm not sure what this accomplishes. I get loss of rep for offensive or spam questions, but for an off-topic question? or one that is just poorly written? Why?

It seems to me that rep ought to be based more on answers on a site of this type. Fundamentally, it seems that rep ought to be based on what you add to the site, not what you ask of it. A particularly good question does add to the site, but a poor question doesn't really detract from it in the same way that a bad (wrong) answer does. Sure, go ahead and give people more rep for asking a particularly good question, but why punish people for asking bad questions when there are other ways of handling that.

Why not handle questions more like comments and allow upvotes, but not downvotes? It seems to me that many, if not most, of the downvoted questions are first timers. It's more likely that your first introduction to the site will be in asking a question, rather than answering. There is a significant risk to alienating new users when their questions are downvoted -- there's a visceral response to seeing that negative number next to your question. Why not let the close/flag system weed out questions that don't belong and the comment system work to improve poorly worded questions.

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@tvanfosson I see your point, if the question isn't clear it can be edited, if its not useful then it should be closed. In regards to the accepted answer, we need to think of how someone is accessing the question. For example, if they stumbled upon the question via google, how can you say its not worth their time to read? It has to be somewhat similar to what they are looking for. Because of the editing capabilities on SO, I rarely see a question thats unclear....misguided maybe, but rarely unclear. LOL I just saw this question is a year old. sorry. – Locutus Apr 29 '10 at 20:36

7 Answers

up vote 21 down vote accepted

Voting on questions serves a very similar purpose to voting on answers: it provides a visible hint to other readers. Chances are, a heavily down-voted question or answer is not worth the time to read, while one with up-votes might well be worth a look. Even more: since August 2010, downvotes also feed the automated Sorry, we are no longer accepting questions from this account, to filter out low quality questions.

If I have a question and I'm searching for an answer, I want to find an existing question that asks this question (and has good answers for it). I don't want a question that was unclear, because chances are the answers will be similarly unhelpful. Not necessarily - but if there are two questions that match my search, then the one that made it easy to provide a good answer is the one I want to read first.

This is why sympathy votes irritate me - they skew the rating of a question or answer away from the intended "who found this useful / unhelpful" scale.

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Jeff Atwood has since said that sympathy upvotes don't actually happen. – Andrew Grimm Jun 28 '11 at 11:18
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@Andrew: I know it happens because some people actually admit to it ("+1 to make up for the downvote", etc.). However, data seems to indicate it isn't much of a problem. – Shog9 Jun 28 '11 at 15:27

As the tooltip for the down vote button says: "This is unclear or not useful."

I think that really is the only criteria we need.

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+1 because I had never actually bothered to read the tooltip ever before. – TheTXI Jul 2 '09 at 15:40
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@TheTXI: It is amazing how many people don't read them and how many disputes could be cleared up if they did read them. – GEOCHET Jul 2 '09 at 15:43
My point is that it doesn't serve the same purpose as that for answers and should be handled differently, not what criteria should people use to apply downvotes. – tvanfosson Jul 2 '09 at 15:49
@tvan: And it has a different tooltip. If you follow that tooltip as guidance, the votes will be used differently as well. – GEOCHET Jul 2 '09 at 15:50
The tooltip I see is "This answer is not helpful (click again to undo)" – Scottie T Jul 2 '09 at 18:31
+1. Says it all, on the spot, up to the user to judge. Vote count is a linear scale attempting to capture a whole range of quality issues, including clarity, correctness & relevance. Couldn't possibly have separate scales for all of them. – John Pirie Jul 2 '09 at 18:42

Maybe you should stop thinking about downvotes as punishment. It's more a quality assurance.

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++Short & sweet. – Shog9 Jul 2 '09 at 17:08
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People react to them that way. I don't think it's just me. – tvanfosson Jul 2 '09 at 19:27
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@tvanfosson: Yes, I know. Stop doing it. That's my point. – Ladybug Killer Jul 2 '09 at 20:04
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it is punishment because it takes away from the person's reputation more than it takes away from the person casting the downvote. – Not me Jul 5 '09 at 6:51
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@Not me: With that argument you can say, it is not fair. But punishment? No one wants to punish you by downvoting. Bad behaviour is punished. Here only bad quality should be made visible. Free your mind, don't take it too serious and never take it personally. – Ladybug Killer Jul 5 '09 at 16:12

Not everybody has the ability to vote to close a question, so voting down a question is often times their way of expressing "this is a bad question and does not belong".

Also, it is common to vote down questions that need lots of work in terms of having horrible sentence structure and are basically unreadable.

It can best be summed up with the idea that there are as many reasons for voting down a question as there are people who vote them down.

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It only takes 50 rep to comment, but 100 rep to vote down. Anyone who can downvote could leave a comment instead to express their opinion. Truly bad questions are closed pretty quickly and comments have more chance of improving a question than a downvote. – tvanfosson Jul 2 '09 at 15:44
@tvan: And that would defeat the idea of a voting system which is what the site was based on. Not to mention revenge downvoting and such. – GEOCHET Jul 2 '09 at 15:46

I must confess that I'm drawn into questions already voted down to -3 and lower because they promise strange wording and astonishing ignorance to concept of SO and usage.

Admit it: You won't skip a post with a substantial low score because it's not worth reading.

Okay, I confess that the true reason is aiming for the reversal badge.


The extened options to flag low quality questions make loosing some of your own rep by downvoting less attractive. And there's no point in downvoting posts of unregistered users with a twitter-bred attention span.

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Good point. I mean, considering the fact we can vote-close a particular question...what good is there in down-voting it? The only types of questions I down-vote / close-vote are typically spam-ish in nature. Or, if the author uses inappropriate language/etc I may down-vote / close-vote too.

Then again...down-voting a question leaves a mark on the authors reputation. This isn't the case with vote-closing a question (or atleast I don't think it is). If a user is abusing the system via questions (commercial in nature, "How can you NOT want x-gadget") voting their question closed won't really discourage that type of behavior.

So perhaps down-voting questions is a good thing after all.

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You may be able to vote for closure, but as TheTXI states not all users will have enough rep for this. – ChrisF Jul 2 '09 at 15:34

If we subscribe to the downvoting as punishment way of thinking then downvoting is the way to handle inappropriate questions, whatever their inappropriateness might be (offensive, stupid, badly written).

If we subscribe to the downvoting as marking useless questions, then downvoting would be a way to handle spam mostly (or utterly incomprehensible questions, maybe).

According to this totally unscientific poll (well, not even a poll), around half of the population subscribes to the downvoting as punishment way of thinking.

Another relevant point is that not everyone can vote to close, so they'll vent up the frustration via a downvote.

EDIT: After the discussion below I've come to think that the real value of downvoting questions is to help people discriminate and let them have the chance not to read uncomprehensible or otherwise awful questions until they've been fixed. As always, downvote with a comment (even if you get serially downvoted for it).

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Best way to handle spam is flag that thing as spam. 6 votes = -100 rep. – TheTXI Jul 2 '09 at 15:36
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Vote for spam + downvote = -112 rep. – John the Seagull Jul 2 '09 at 15:40
Also, if you are a spammer you will hardly care about rep, it's better to relieve people from the nuisance by letting the question have a negative value. – John the Seagull Jul 2 '09 at 15:43
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Vinko: That is true, but if I am going to flag for spam, it should already cast a downvote automatically if I am not mistaken, plus it won't charge me any rep for the flag as opposed to the -1 for giving him -2. I don't want to bother wasting my rep for obvious spam questions. – TheTXI Jul 2 '09 at 15:43
I'd be ok with leaving the behavior of a flag giving a downvote. I just don't see the point of "here, let me help you make your question better by letting you know that I don't like it with a downvote." – tvanfosson Jul 2 '09 at 15:54
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That argument is exactly applicable to answers as well... it's just that answers might be more actively harmful than questions, but, as you can put anything in a question (such as sample code, arguments, ways of doing things as examples, etc.) questions can be harmful as well. – John the Seagull Jul 2 '09 at 15:58
@Vinko: good point. I'm thinking specifically of questions asking for help doing... bad things to users. Strictly speaking, they may be on-topic and such, but it's worth visibly flagging them as unwise! – Shog9 Jul 2 '09 at 16:52
@vinko -- negative rep. this is why I have start deleting answers that get a downvote before an upvote. Why have an answer that is just lowering my rep? Sure someone may come along and cast an upvote ... but why bother? – Not me Jul 5 '09 at 7:26

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