Up-votes are easy on both SO and meta. You like something, you vote it up.

Down-votes are trickier.

On SO down-voting a question means that the question is a poor one. Poor meaning badly written or really annoying for some reason (e.g. give-me-da-codez).

Down-voting an answer usually means it's plain wrong.

On Meta, however, many questions revolve around matters of taste (e.g. the HW question). When voting on answers to such questions, I want to be able to push down the suggestions that I disagree with and promote the ones that I think are correct. But I don't want to hurt people's reputation by doing so.

Down-voting on Meta isn't really saying "your answer is stupid and wrong"; it's more like "I prefer we do it the other way". The whole site is basically meant to discuss matters of social preference, etiquette, do's and dont's, etc.

In SO most people wouldn't down-vote an answer just because some other answer is better. People generally accept that there may be different solutions to a problem and feel comfortable in letting up-votes alone decide on the most popular one.

In Meta, on the other hand, there might be groups that really care about some issue and would like to see it solved in a particular way. And, in case meta replaces UV, voting on answers would really be voting on preference more than correctness.

Should down-vote semantics on Meta be different than on SO?

Perhaps the system should not deduct reputation points if your answer gets down-voted, thereby allowing/encouraging more free down-voting.

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45% accept rate
I merged a duplicate, question id 811, into here – Tom Ritter Jun 29 '09 at 19:36
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7 Answers

I view rep here as different. It means nothing about you, your trust, or your knowledge. But I'm not sure what it does mean.

I vote up a "question" when I think it raises a good, valid point or suggestion. I vote up an "answer" when I think it provides a good solution to the "question". I vote down when I don't think it's a good idea or it's a subpar solution. If I don't vote, I don't have an opinion (I don't care, it doesn't matter to me, I'm not sold yet).

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I think the rep score on meta has something to do with the level of addic^H^H, ahem, enthusiasm with regards to SO / SF. – Jonik Jun 30 '09 at 20:31
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I think downvotes on meta are just saying that you do not agree. But that can turn into people downvoting a lot.

Since opinions cant be wrong, just misinformed.

I think we should go easy on the downvotes to start with.

  • Spam
  • Offensive answers
  • etc

Should be things we obviously flag (or downvote if we feel so)

I think the answer is to turn off downvotes and make the flagging feature better fleshed out.

Like sorting flagged items lower than non flagged items and showing visually if the item is flagged.

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I agree. But I don't want to hurt someone else's rep because I disagree with him. Hence, the suggestion to make down-votes rep-free. – Assaf Jun 28 '09 at 17:24
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Down-vote on meta == i don't like your avatar...

Should down-vote semantics on Meta be different than on SO?

Naw. As with SO, reputation is influenced much more by up-votes than down-votes. You're gonna need to be desperately unpopular to really be hurt by 'em.

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Nobody could possibly dislike my doughnuts avatar, so i'm fine with that. – Assaf Jun 28 '09 at 17:26
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Those are donuts? Oops... I thought they were flowers! runs off to revert downvotes on all Assaf's posts – Shog9 Jun 28 '09 at 17:28
I like this answer, but I don't like your avatar. So I decided I'm not going to vote this up, or down. Or maybe it's just because I'm out of votes for the day. – Brad Gilbert Jun 28 '09 at 17:31
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Well I'm living proof of how much it can affect a user on meta, I'd have more of a chance to recover what rep I lost as a new user if it was possible to find more problems with the site to be fixed or just a better way of doing things but is it really worth it for a new user like me who suggests 1 thing and gets reset bk to day 1 so can't even upvote other users posts anymore because a small group of people didn't like my idea. I'd have to say it's pretty clear to new users why down-votes shouldn't be used on meta or at least it should be used like it is on SO. – Myzifer Jan 28 '11 at 10:37
@Myzifer: You made one very unpopular suggestion, and as a result were temporarily prevented from showing your support for other suggestions. Surely that makes sense? As for "a small group of people" not liking your idea... yes, only 11 people down-voted it. However, no one up-voted it. A show of minority support - three up-votes - would have more than counteracted any effect on your reputation from the majority disagreement. That you didn't even get one vote says a lot about how poorly you justified your request - learn from that! – Shog9 Jan 28 '11 at 18:54
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I think that if you disagree with something on here you should articulate why you disagree instead of just downvoting it.

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I think that's appropriate whenever you downvote anything anywhere. – Thomas Owens Jun 29 '09 at 19:01
@Bill, and I did articulate why. However, it's still a rep-punch. And unlike SO, a user on metaSO can't just 'clean up his answer'. If he's done a perfect job of articulating himself, and I still disagree, there's nothing he can do to change my mind, so it feels weird to punish him. – devinb Jun 29 '09 at 19:03
Would certainly help me... I'm getting blasted today and I have no clue why... – Michael Pryor Jun 29 '09 at 19:03
Personally, if someone's downvoting me because they think i stepped on their toes or some such, i'd just as soon they didn't bother commenting. I'm aware that it goes on, but i'd just as soon not have it rubbed in my face... – Shog9 Jun 29 '09 at 19:07
@Thomas Owens: I totally agree. @devinb: I think up and down voting still has a purpose here. I think meta-SO should be more of a discussion than the main sites, but vote totals can still be a rough gauge of community opinion. @Michael Pryor: Ouch! I don't mind getting blasted, but I appreciate a comment to let me know why I'm wrong. @Shog9: I would prefer they express their opinion than say nothing at all. If they have no real reason for downvoting me, this will be revealed by the quality of their comment, then I know I can just ignore them. – Bill the Lizard Jun 29 '09 at 19:35
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Now that Meta StackOverflow is the only Meta site that maintains a separate reputation, I thought that this question should be revisited.

The problem with Meta-rep is this: while reputation doesn't mean the same thing on a regular sight as MSO, it still affects what you can do on the site. Downvotes take reputation and upvotes give it. But reputation is still how you get privileges. And that's a problem.

At this moment, I've got about 970 MSO rep. If I post a number of suggestions that I see as perfectly valid, but the people on MSO don't want to see adopted, I lose a lot of rep. It's not necessarily that the ideas are bad; all it would take is that they were not... accepted among the community. And thus, simply by adding ideas to the site, I'm pushed farther away from greater privileges.

Indeed, there have been some MSO conversations that I've been reluctant to even consider bringing up, in part for these reasons. Questions about what forums are, what SE is, whether forums still have a place in a post-SE world, how best SE-style sites should build a community, the nature of a SE-based community vs. a forum, etc. My views on these issues would certainly be... controversial and in some ways antithetical to the prevailing wind of the people on MSO.

So if I were to talk about them, I lose rep. Not because I'm right or wrong, but simply because of the general feelings of the collective of people on MSO.

And that would be fine... if rep didn't give me abilities. The ability to create tags, to cast close votes, to see the up/down votes on a question/answer, unreviewed edits, etc.

For regular SE sites, reputation is a relative measure of the actual worth of the person. A person who has high rep has contributed significantly to the site. And thus, this person is more deserving of powers over the site. On MSO, this is not the case.

So my suggestion is this: leave the rep the same, but make MSO privileges based on the privileges you have for the highest rep site on your account. Since MSO is effectively shared (it's the default discussion place for Stack Exchange), it makes sense that being a member in good standing for any Stack Exchange site would transfer over. So if you are a 10,000 rep user of Super User, you would have the same privileges on MSO.

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Reputation in this site means pretty close to nothing.

If you disagree, downvote, preferably with a comment, and if you agree, upvote. It's not really a big deal as far as reputation goes the loss of 2 points.

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Reputation does have one very concrete meaning (or corollary), i.e., the elevated editing & moderation privileges. For example, it slightly irks me that currently I can't fix tagging on questions here on meta... – Jonik Jul 1 '09 at 10:26
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Why isn't it enough promoting the suggestions you like? If the others stay on a low level, it is shown what the majority thinks without downvoting. If they rise also, you have to live with that.

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Then why have down-votes at all? – Assaf Jun 29 '09 at 4:07
Yes, exactly. You do not need them here. – Ladybug Killer Jun 29 '09 at 6:51
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