I was reading Bill the Lizard's response mentioning (rightfully so) that voting for the same user - even with good intentions - is an invitation to possibly hit "suspicious voting pattern" and have those votes negated. So I started wondering:
Does the "suspicious voting pattern" logic take into account the ratio of your upvotes to total upvotes for the user?
Or is that logic merely based on the ratio of your votes for that user to your overall votes?
As an example, I follow most of Perl questions and try to upvote the best answers. A large proportion of great answers for Perl are penned by Sinan Ünür (I'm obviously not the only one of that opinion, as he is a very close second runner in Perl tag statistics - after a gentleman who writes Perl books for a living ;) )
However, I am somewhat reluctant to upvote too many of Sinan's posts as I'm worried that on my low-vote days the system will consider a large ratio of my votes given to him to be suspicious and cancel them. But if I knew that the system would disregard my upvotes for posts which are otherwise highly upvoted, it'd remove such a worry.
P.S. I'm half expecting that the official answer will be 'any details of "suspicious voting pattern" logic are secret to prevent it from being gamed' - in this case security through obscurity just might work, so it's a plausible scenario IMHO.