I don't want to be like the little kid that got beat up at school and runs home crying to mommy, but I just got tactically downvoted in a question. Someone else posted a virtually identical answer to mine, after I posted mine, and both of us quickly got 1 upvote. He then downvoted me, got a few more upvotes, and removed the downvote when he got "ahead," mostly taking advantage of the fact most people vote for the top correct answer and then move on.

It has been discussed at some points why tactical downvoting is bad/wrong/etc, but it's obviously impossible to really detect for regular users because of voting being anonymous. The only reason I was able to "catch" the offender this time is because I happened to take a look at his reputation after I got the downvote and I noted that it was 3170. I then refreshed the page (looking for any vote changing, mostly) and my downvote was gone and his reputation had switched to 3171.

The question I am referring to is here.

So, is this something I just need to suck up and move on, or are there voting records that can confirm this and perhaps take some kind of action to prevent it from happening in the future?

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44% accept rate
Granted, this is an old question, but I notice now that yours is the accepted and top answer now and his only has a net upvote of 1. – GreenGiant Apr 6 at 16:24
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6 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted

Well, there are two approaches:

  • Yes, you can lodge a formal complaint. Ask the moderators to contact the guy, get them to investigate the behaviour as far as they can (I don't know whether votes which are made and then deleted are retained in the database) and see what happens. Ultimately it's hard to see what the result can be - deleting the answer? Transferring votes? It would all be a bit unsatisfactory. The only benefit would be that the guy is told off and hopefully won't do it again.

  • Let it go. You've put comments on the answer, so hopefully he'll either explain himself or at least know that it's a pretty unreasonable thing to do (assuming he did do it - he could have undone a downvote elsewhere, of course). Move on, answer more questions, make the world a better place that way.

Personally I'd go for option 2. I sympathise, but in the end it's only a bit of reputation. At 32K it's a fairly insignificant amount of it, too. I'm glad you left the comment though - I hope this guy doesn't do this on a regular basis. (Again, assuming he is guilty as charged.)

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Agreed. Is your site still down? – RSolberg Jul 17 '09 at 6:54
The rep tracker is up. It's only the bits which touch the database of notes/errata/etc for C# in Depth that's down. – Jon Skeet Jul 17 '09 at 6:58
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+1 for letting it go... – Stu Thompson Jul 17 '09 at 9:06
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I agree with Let it Go. The reason I say this is because downvoting was always meant to be anonymous, so all you are doing is assuming tactical downvoting on the other person's part. For all you know that person legitimately believes that the other answers are wrong. It sounds to me like you are attempting to punish thought crime. The only voting pattern which I believe should be reported and punished for is blatant serial up/down voting on a particular user (which is very easy to identify using the mod tools). – TheTXI Jul 17 '09 at 11:20
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Well, downvoting an answer which contains exactly the same text as your own one (and was voted first) is a special case - unless they're posting information they know to me untrue! – Jon Skeet Jul 17 '09 at 13:58
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@Jon: Really? How do you know he didn't make a mistake and press the button by accident and then take it back? – GEOCHET Jul 22 '09 at 16:59
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It's possible that happened, although the timing doesn't make it sound likely. Usually you'd spot an accidental downvote very quickly. If I'd done that, I'd leave a comment explaining it - especially when attention has been drawn to it. – Jon Skeet Jul 22 '09 at 17:07
@Jon: I do not see any voting timing records. – GEOCHET Jul 22 '09 at 17:11
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@RichB: The timing is in the question - a downvote, then enough time for a few more votes to be cast, then the downvote being cancelled. Also enough time for Paolo to notice the user's rep and notice it changing again. Yes, it's certainly possible that this is still an innocent mistake - but I think it unlikely, especially due to the lack of explanation in the answer now that it's been pointed out. – Jon Skeet Jul 22 '09 at 18:33
@Jon: To go and publicly ridicule and accuse the user and vigilante downvote based strictly on Paolo's obviously very biased and emotional opinion with no supporting fact seems like a very bad decision. If Paolo felt it was an issue, he should have reported it to the mods so the issue could have been dealt with behind the scenes. I am also disappointed in your actions in the comments on that answer by the way. – GEOCHET Jul 22 '09 at 18:40
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I have gently asked the user to back up his implication that he is innocent with an actual claim that that's the case. As it is, he appears to be trying to seem innocent without actually coming out and saying it. I would feel a lot happier if he'd either admit to having been the downvoter, or state that he definitely wasn't. Could you point out where anyone has "publicly ridiculed" anyone? Paolo criticised him, but that's very different from "public ridicule". He's publicly called the behaviour into question, which again isn't the same as ridiculing the user, IMO. – Jon Skeet Jul 22 '09 at 19:19
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Could you look at my actual comments and say where I'm demanding anything? I have politely asked for clarification. I feel it would be helpful. Do you think otherwise? I think anyone has the right to ask politely whether someone actually did something, when there is circumstantial evidence that they did but they've hinted that they didn't. If we don't have the right to ask anyone any questions, what gave you the right to ask a question in your previous comment? Paolo feels that someone has behaved unjustly towards him - I think it's entirely reasonable for him to ask about it politely. – Jon Skeet Jul 22 '09 at 19:51
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I agree that the downvoting of the answer was unnecessary and somewhat moblike (although the upvoting of the definitely better answer by Paolo is okay by me) - but I don't see anything like a mob in the comments. In particular, a lynch mob rarely stops to ask the person in question whether they were actually involved... – Jon Skeet Jul 22 '09 at 20:07
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@RichB: It would certainly have helped for Paolo to be slightly more circumspect and explain his observations right from the start... but I don't think Paolo's behaviour is nearly as bad as you're making it out to be. – Jon Skeet Jul 22 '09 at 21:09
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@Rich You are king of getting the last word in :) – Miyagi Coder Jul 22 '09 at 21:37
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On Hacker News, you cannot downvote anyone that replies to your post, and on Slashdot you're not allowed to use your moderation powers on the same thread that you post on. Maybe we could adopt something similar here, where you can't downvote any competing answers to a question? This has some drawbacks, but can you really trust someone who posted their own reply to be objective about judging the other peoples' replies?

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note there is no way to perform analysis on the data dump to determine the scale of the problem (by design) – waffles Jul 17 '09 at 6:40
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This has been suggested before and I personally think it's a terrible idea. For one thing there's the matter of ordering - if I've downvoted, should I think not be able to post an answer? The other main thing is that it would mean I couldn't downvote entirely incorrect answers if I've posted an answer. See stackoverflow.com/questions/1124753 for an example of where that would have been a problem. – Jon Skeet Jul 17 '09 at 6:41
(If you can see deleted answers you'll get more of an idea of why it's important.) – Jon Skeet Jul 17 '09 at 6:45
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@Jon: Yes, I do agree that it would prevent much 'legitimate' downvoting. I guess you'd just have to trust that someone else will recognize and downvote the entirely incorrect answer (worst case: you'll have to address the validity in your own answer). As for ordering, I would think that it would just undo your downvotes if you posted an answer (i.e. it wouldn't block you from posting if you downvoted). – Kyle Cronin Jul 17 '09 at 6:46
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That definitely sounds to me like the cure is worse than the disease. – Jon Skeet Jul 17 '09 at 7:09
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By posting another answer you've made your case against the entirely incorrect answer. Why is it necessary to add a downvote on top of that? It strikes me as mildly mean-spirited. – Patrick McElhaney Aug 27 '09 at 16:10
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@Jon Skeet: other people will take care of downvoting the wrong answers if you happen to have answered it already. After all you can only just add one single vote to the wrong answer. Whereas the people who abuse the system (eg by permanently downvoting competing answers) can still do it, even with the "radically reduced the window for undoing votes" fix. – romkyns Nov 5 '09 at 23:44
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To help deal with the "tactical downvoting" problem, we have radically reduced the window for undoing votes.

There is now only the very briefest of windows where you can undo a vote. (edit: this was increased to 5 minutes)

After that, the vote is permanently "locked in", until the post is edited. Once the post is edited you may vote for it again.

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yes, but the "vote after edit" is not new. What is new is the drastically reduced window for undoing votes. – Jeff Atwood Aug 27 '09 at 10:10
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Yikes, that sure is really short. I made a downvote, but after some research I decided it wasn't justified. Isn't it possible to allow someone to remove the downvote, without regaining their point? Hell, you can even lower my score by two more if that'll get them their points back :P – Thorarin Aug 27 '09 at 18:50
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There are legitimate times when a downvote is warranted based on initial impressions or original content. However, after after additional research (or the question being edited) the downvote is not warranted anymore. By reducing the window it is no longer possible to reverse a warranted downvote for these type of legitimate reasons. – Scott Dorman Aug 28 '09 at 3:14
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I still think the Underminer badge is a better idea :) meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/102/additional-badge-ideas/… – bobobobo Sep 4 '09 at 5:13
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I find this troublesome because even if a post is edited after I have downvoted, I have only this small window to remove my vote, and there is no notification provided when such a post (that I have either commented on or voted on) is edited. – Ether Sep 5 '09 at 18:14
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The "tactical down-voting problem" would go away if the potential conflict of interest was removed. Don't allow users to vote down competing answers. The rule should be that you can vote on someone else's answer, or you can provide your own answer, but you can't do both. This approach has proved to be effective on Slashdot. Neither the reduced window nor the -1 penalty have adequately addressed the underlying problem, yet both cause other problems. Increasing complexity by piling on more fixes reminds me of the old lady who swallowed a fly. – Dan Dyer Sep 7 '09 at 19:05
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Evil! I just went to undo an upvote a few minutes after I voted, because I misunderstood the person's answer, and now I can't >:( – Jason S Sep 18 '09 at 2:59
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I find myself unable to up-vote a question I previously up-voted and then un-up-voted (what can I say; I'm indecisive). I get what you're trying to do here, but I think that not being able to up-vote feels a bit like collateral damage. – Craig Stuntz Oct 7 '09 at 20:39
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@Dan Dyer et al: The rule should be that you can vote on someone else's answer, or you can provide your own answer, but you can't do both. I've certainly voted on answers, and then after reading all other answers, decided to help out and post my own answer with another solution. So, not being allowed to answer after having voted would not work for me. The main goal is still to get question-answer sites, right? – Arjan Oct 11 '09 at 11:26
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What is "tactical downvoting", and how does prohibiting us from changing our minds prevent it? – endolith Oct 14 '09 at 19:34
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I sometimes really need to downvote other answers even when I've answered the same question myself. No, hear me out! It's only when the previous answer(s) have been upvoted but are totally wrong - really seriously misleading. – MarkJ Nov 4 '09 at 17:25
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Not to point out anything, but all you have to do is edit the question/answer (add a space somewhere, idk) and then you can change your vote. I think this solution is a bad design choice. – Won't Jan 8 '10 at 20:16
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@jeff got nabbed by this again. What is the window now, anyhow? 30 seconds? I had to edit the question just to be able to correct my mistake. Your solution... I think there's something wrong with it. – Won't Jan 20 '10 at 14:22
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This seems stupid. I'd imagine tactical downvoters not bother undoing votes and use any reason if confronted about it (if ever). I imagine this would cause more problems then solve. -edit- example meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/6250/… – acidzombie24 Apr 10 '10 at 17:46
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-1: I disagree...removing a vote so I can perform due diligence to confirming an answer works and then upvote it seems perfectly fine. I don't see how this is gaming the system. Sorry, @tdaines, I'd really like to upvote your answer... :/ – IAbstract Nov 14 '10 at 21:02
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I don't like this idea of not allowing downvotes in threads you have a post. There are far more reasons for a down ote than tactical reasons. If you downvote an answer and supply a better one, doesn't the OP win? Isn't that the goal?

As an OP I do tend to try and watch the answers I receive and will call out duicate answers and awardthe accepted answer to the first post. As a answere I'll call out the behavior if I see it. And then close my eyes, scream, and mOve on.

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For any question there are almost always more people who vote than who answer, so there's no need to worry too much about one missing vote. If you write your good answer, addressing (either directly or indirectly) the flaws in the other answer, somebody else will likely do the necessary voting. – Dan Dyer Sep 7 '09 at 19:12
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Jeff has blogged about voting problems here and here so there are procedures in place to detect some dodgy voting practices. However, I'm not sure they'd detect what you describe as it's transient rather than permanent.

This would be a more serious problem if this was this posters normal behaviour. But without constant monitoring of their voting habits you're not going to be able prove anything.

So in this case I'd let it go.

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Umbrella after rain. – kd304 Jul 18 '09 at 17:31
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There is an inverse game to that, which is potentially more harmful:

  • Post a good answer to a question
  • Upvote everyone else, to draw the community to upvote them more, this way, driving them into the false impression about the goodness of their answer
  • After an answer is accepted other than yours, delete your own post, and if it got upvoted or downvoted 3 or more times, you'll receive a Disciplined/Peer pressure badge

Nash cooperative game theory with punishment strategy.

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I think rep would be a much stronger incentive than getting a bronze badge would... – htw Jul 17 '09 at 9:14
Disciplined and Peer Pressure are only awarded once per user. – chaos Jul 17 '09 at 11:44
Thanks for the info about the badge. The game isn't about the get-badge. – kd304 Jul 17 '09 at 17:51
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