I've recently posted a very silly answer to a question. It got voted down, rightfully so. Then, I guess, somebody took a pity on me and upvoted a question. I was really surprized that I've got a full +10 on my reputation back. Shouldn't you get a net value of up and down votes? E.g. in my case, should I have only got a +2 back?
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+10 on your question. The current system rewards controversial posts more than good posts -- if I can say something that is inflammatory enough that it gets both downvotes and upvotes, I can rake in the rep. One might even say this is a good recipe for gaming the system. Now, should it go both ways? If we made the reputation gained/lost from a post based on the post's net score (barring the daily rep cap interfering) even for an overall positive post? e.g. so a post that gets votes of (+1, +1, -1, +1) would receive (10 + 10 - 10 + 10) score, so that the -2 deduction only kicks in if the post's net score dips below zero? |
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Yeah, that bugs me too. IMHO, up-votes to posts with a negative score should merely counteract a single down-vote in terms of rep awarded to the user, not give them a bonus. In the past, I've actually gained more reputation from some trollish answers than from equivalently-ranked serious answers... I'm now more careful to CW such responses. See: Should we reduce rep bonus for upvotes on posts with a negative score? |
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In the real world you would think so. In Stack Overflow, we like to reward a lot more than we punish apparently (I guess to prevent people from getting feelings hurt too easily and to prevent people from gaming the system). BUT there has been talk in the past of increasing the downvote damage to -5 instead of -2, although it is likely to also come with an increase in penalty to cast. |
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The community should encourage people to ask. It is fair that upvotes have bigger impact on reputation than downvotes. |
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This becomes a very effective reputation denial tool -- if you want to stop other users from getting reputation, downvote their posts to -1 as soon as you see them (that is, when they start out at 0 votes). They'll now need at least 2 votes, minimum, to even begin gaining any reputation. Right now I don't upvote a -1 because: (Generally speaking, of course ... assume, for the sake of argument, the post in question is in fact objectively bad and not unfairly downvoted, or misunderstood.)
Once it is known that upvoting a -1 post doesn't give the post owner any reputation boost (and thus does not devalue your own reputation and ranking, or perversely incent bad posters), the incentive to cast these "pity upvotes" increases -- because #2 no longer exists as a disincentive! Hmm. One thing I hadn't considered until I wrote this, w/r/t item number 1: sort order effects are less of an issue for questions than answers, because answer sort order is aggressively affected by votes -- whereas question sort order is a much looser and more indirect relationship. So it's karmically easier to justify pity upvotes on questions than answers, because item #1, sort order, is not so heavily affected. Good thing question upvotes are only worth +5 now, eh? |
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Totally agree. I think calculating reputation on net votes solves the problem of "sympathy upvotes" much better than simply increasing the weight of downvotes. Negative net votes can still have a different weight, ie. the formula would be
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By current rules, an upvote indicates a great question or answer. Downvote indicates a bad question or answer. A really great question or answer adds more value to the site than a bad one can detract from it, hence the different weight of downvotes and upvotes. Rewarding controversial posts is generally good. They must be definitely on topic, stimulating people's thinking more than banal, never voted posts. If they weren't on topic, flags would arrive instead of downvotes and the post would soon be closed or deleted. If they were controversial unnecessarily, the site allows anyone to try and compete with a non-controversial post of the same level of attractivity. The current scheme starts misbehaving when too many people, instead of voting for themselves, start feeling misguided responsibility for the net vote count. For example, upvoting a -1 post because "it is not that bad", or not downvoting a -1 post because "feedback was already provided by someone else". For controversial, highly read posts, this pattern of thinking can presumably result in a period of volatile voting total near zero and a huge reputation benefit to the poster without anyone really thinking that the post is so great. That's why compassionate upvoting undermines the reputation system. Upvote only great posts. |
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