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Why do you lose reputation for down-voting?

In other words, why is StackOverflow's rating system biased (toward the positive side)? As as result, rating scores do not reflect reality.

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Possible duplicate – Peter Ajtai Sep 10 '10 at 23:59
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closed as exact duplicate by waiwai933, Koper, gnostradamus, Andy E's head, Jon Seigel Sep 11 '10 at 16:32

This question covers exactly the same ground as earlier questions on this topic; its answers may be merged with another identical question. See the FAQ for guidance on how to improve it.

2 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

Partly to dissuade people from gaming, it costs you to downvote someone else. Otherwise, there would be a flurry of downvotes from people hoping to gain an advantage for their answers based on the fact that their's appears both higher in the resulting display order and with positive (or at least zero) votes. Because it costs to you do the vote and it is locked in after a short window, it is less likely that people will use strategic downvoting.

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If you don't feel that a post is bad enough for you to lose 1 rep over it to say it, then you're probably not convinced enough for your opinion to be truly worth displaying to the entire world. Or you have some rep whore issues. Why don't you just upvote answers that are correct? And if there aren't any, answer it yourself?

We like to think positive here. Welcome to meta. :D

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