Users are allowed broad discretion in casting votes1... you'll often see mods say to "vote however you like". I'd like to point out the you in that -- YOU are responsible for your own votes, and for reading and understanding posts before you vote on them. Voting rings often go hand-in-hand with proxy voting, where users accept each others' assessment in lieu of their own analysis. The very phrase "close vote please", abbreviates as cvpls, is a direct request for someone to take your word for it. (Ditto for "downvote please" and "delete please").
This is clear abuse of the system; while it does allow closing questions faster, it also exacerbates the effect of human error. If users were trusted enough to single-click to close questions, they'd be some sort of moderator. Stack Exchange is designed so that community moderation scales up with content volume, not by making individual users more powerful (the net effect of proxy voting), but by having ever-increasing numbers of users who wield voting privileges. That's why there's a daily cap on votes after all, to slow individual users down and have them take time to fully evaluate posts before voting.
The appropriate use of voting rings is to bring attention to questionable posts for more users to independently assess. Not proxying. Ever. But they've clearly moved inappropriately in the proxying direction, on a very large scale.
Some specific objective problems with proxy voting:
- It appears that the post has been evaluated by multiple users who agree, when in fact as few as one made the decision and the others just piled on without actually doing a second evaluation.
- The delete vote rings give votes back (but not close votes, thanks Raff) to themselves, allowing them to exceed the designed-in limits.
Perhaps posts aren't getting voting attention from five real independently-thinking users quickly enough to stop FGITW feeding of vampires. But if something is worth doing, it is worth doing right. Proxy voting is not doing it right, it is dishonest.
Instead, I propose creation of a "club moderator" role (like diamond mod, it's the name of a suit in a deck of cards). This will be a mini diamond-moderator, which only one privilege, single-vote closure, and even that will be weakened. Doing this will eliminate the abuse present in proxy-voting rings:
- Club moderators will be elected, not self-appointed.
- Closed questions will clearly indicate that a single user cast the vote.
- A close vote cast by a club moderator will not be locked like moderator closure and deletion. It simply has the weight of up to five normal votes. But it can be reversed by the community.
- Club moderator votes only work on the first closure. If the community has already voted to reopen, club votes carry no extra weight.
Proxy-voting will be stomped on with a vengeance after the first round of club moderator elections.We can wait and see whether close voting rings are left with nothing to do, when just outright closing the question becomes easier than sending it to the ring.- Club voting only enables closing questions. There is by design no replacement for proxy downvotes or organized deletion, which don't have public visibility, and revert back to "one user, one vote, always think before voting".
We can discuss whether club votes, like Mjolnir, should be limited to the user's tags. And whether there should be a daily limit on club votes per user.
1And the user discretion only applies to up- and down-votes, anyway.