I don't know if people don't explain why they up or down vote because they don't care or because they don't want the person to know they voted on an answer (or question)... But, it might be nice to be able to leave a comment anonymously as to why it was voted. It could give us more insight as to people's thoughts on posts.

Really, I think this would come into play a lot more dealing with down votes more than up votes, but I could see it being beneficial in both situations.

See also:

an answer posted to Encouraging people to explain down-votes

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If people didn't give bad answers there would be no downvotes. Maybe to fix the problem we should only allow good answers! – jjnguy Jul 17 '09 at 13:06
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@Justin the trouble is, most "bad" answers are due to ignorance and it would help its author a lot if he was not only to know that his answer was bad, but also why so he can learn something, too – Tobias Kienzler Jun 22 '10 at 11:23
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@jjnguy: The problem isn't with downvotes. The problem is with unexplained downvotes. It's easy to sit in the cheap seats and moan "this sucks". But if someone is going to randomly penalize someone, they should stand behind their opinion. – Joel Etherton Oct 6 '10 at 19:26
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@Joel, I don't feel unexplained downvotes are a problem at all. – jjnguy Oct 6 '10 at 19:36
How you will know that answer is "good"? – Evgeny Aug 12 '11 at 13:27
@jjnguy: I the bad thing of answer says. It can be edit! – ahmadali shafiee Feb 14 at 21:03
@jjnguy: some people downvote questions, not just answers, and how on earth does one allow only good answers? That's the point of voting. – Tony_Henrich May 15 at 20:45
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6 Answers

up vote 17 down vote accepted
+50

Voting is meant to be anonymous. We -encourage- users to leave a comment (especially when downvoting) but do not force it upon anyone.

If you are nice enough to leave a comment on a downvote to explain yourself, there shouldn't be any reason for anonymity other than to protect yourself from revenge downvoting. I don't think this happens quite often enough to warrant anonymous comments (plus those can be definitely abused).

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Actually, there is a psychological reason to allow anon posting. By forcing a person to leave a comment with their name attached they have to admit they are causing someone else distress (as little as it might be, it is still there) and ultimately acts as a deterrent to tell why the down vote was cast. This doesn't prevent them from down voting as that is still anon, it just prevents them from explaining why. It's a lose/lose situation for the poster. – Kevin Jul 17 '09 at 13:01
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@Kevin, while you are correct, I think that is a problem with the attitude that we should not be seeking to condone. Every person should be able to publicly stand by every downvote they've made. – devinb Jul 17 '09 at 13:07
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But then why are down votes anonymous (I'm not saying you are wrong)? The current system still condones the behavior, but deters someone from explaining why. – Kevin Jul 17 '09 at 13:09
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There are three reasons not to leave a downvote: shame/fear of reprisal, laziness, obviousness. We can't fix laziness, we don't need to fix obviousness, and if people are ashamed of their comments, then they probably shouldn't be commenting at all. – devinb Jul 17 '09 at 13:23
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So what might be done about fear of reprisal? – Dan Williams Jul 23 '10 at 16:02
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Anonymity is a complete cop-out. People who come to this site for answers aren't looking for reason in the crowd of the anonymous. I'd like to know that the source of an answer, or the source of disagreement for an answer, is at least reputable. Personally I think a person of integrity stands behind their opinion with their name. I'm sure if someone looked in the database, you wouldn't find a lot of anonymous downvotes from Jon Skeet. – Joel Etherton Oct 6 '10 at 19:24
Not leaving a downvote because it costs me a precious 1 of my own reputation to take 2 off some palooka? – CashCow Feb 18 '11 at 12:18
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A reason for down-voting could be selected from a list. This would allow the response to remain anonymous, as only aggregated totals could be displayed, there would be feedback, so that the OP could improve his or her future postings, and selecting from a reason list is already done for post flagging. – Jim Fell Jun 24 '11 at 20:21
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The site (and thus the general public) benefits if the poster who gets downvoted knows why they got downvoted and has an opportunity to learn from the downvote feedback. I've been downvoted on answers where I get many positive votes and even get selected as the preferred answer and I have no idea why someone downvoted. That isn't useful to anyone. Leaving feedback should be encouraged (in the UI) whereas it is NOT encouraged at all now. You just click the down arrow and you're done. There's no UI at all connected to a downvote operation that encourages you to leave feedback. – jfriend00 Nov 27 '11 at 20:34
Maybe an anonymous private message to the poster would help people underrstand way the got downvoted. – Ian Ringrose Apr 22 at 19:51
what if it was anonymouse to regular users, but moderators could see who wrote the comment? – Ephraim Apr 23 at 15:01
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This is all about feedback. If anyone posts a question or an answer that 'merits' a downvote, it would be great to have some feedback as to 'why' this was downvoted. As there is (justified) fear for retaliation, comments should be optionally anonymous. This way, 'the brave' can leave a comment with their name, while the rest of us can leave a comment without their name.

Also, consider 'standard', anonymous, downvote reasons. This would enable people to rapidly downvote and give feedback at the same time.

My 0,02€

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I suggested Provide (optional) anonymous reasoning field for down-votes which was closed as duplicate of this feature-request, but since I had a suggestion on how to give the option of an anonymous down-vote-comment I'm taking the liberty to copy-paste a bit:


Extending the "Please consider adding a comment..." reminder with a comment field bellow which allows to leave an anonymous comment reasoning the down-vote. This could help preventing revenge-down-votes and yet help the OP improving.

The field should be clarifying the optionality of this process, but as a motivation, half the down-vote-cost could be refunded as a reward. Or only half the down-vote loss for the OP is cast for unreasoned down-votes.

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A downvote costs 1 reputation to cast! It's barely a penalty, and half of it is not only even less worth it, but also would involve retooling the whole system to support half-points. Likewise, halving the penalty to reputation in the absence of a reason is a similar logical disconnect to this earlier one. The penalty to reputation is because the user made a bad post, which is completely unrelated to whether the caster decided to explain the downvote (cont.) – Grace Note Jun 22 '10 at 11:49
We cast downvotes in order to mark bad posts, not users. Encouraging downvote behavior based on the reputation penalty to the user is entirely opposite that line of thought. If anything, that "motivation" makes the nicer folk less inclined to give reasons, and gives more reason for more malicious people to falsify their reasoning. – Grace Note Jun 22 '10 at 11:53
@ccomet I guess you're right about the reward-part, your reasoning puts a "flag down-vote-comment as irregular"-system to my mind, resulting in way too much fuss about rep instead of good answers. That's why I said "could be refunded". So, what's your opinion concerning the optional comment field at least? – Tobias Kienzler Jun 22 '10 at 12:03
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@Tobias Mechanically, I don't see an optional comment field helping too much. The majority of users who would care to use it are the same people who might explain their downvotes anyway (whether or not they explicitly state that they downvoted). There would be an increase in the number of explanations from users who are too shy to attribute their critiques, no matter how good-natured their statements may be. I can't comprehend why people want to be nameless saviors, so I only concern myself with the mechanical implications of this concept. – Grace Note Jun 22 '10 at 12:12
@ccomet neither do I understand the shyness, but I certainly prefer anonymous (appropriate) comments on what's (not so obviously) wrong instead of a cricket chirping down-vote that will haunt me for the rest of my... say... three minutes... but anyway, even Jon Skeet wants to improve (see his comment here) – Tobias Kienzler Jun 22 '10 at 12:25
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If I think I need to explain something, I have no qualms with attaching my name to it. That's it, quite plain and simple. There is nothing I would, or even could, say on any of the sites that I would not want attributed to my name. – Grace Note Jun 22 '10 at 12:29
@ccomet if only everyone shared your point of view... but hey, the suggestion is about an optional comment, so if those kiddies have some useful critique and simply fear something like "the down-voted strikes back" (childish of both sites... who cares about rep anyway?), I prefer giving them the opportunity to "help" – Tobias Kienzler Jun 22 '10 at 12:40
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@Tobias: Still need to break this mental association between voting and comments. Both can be used to provide feedback to an author, but neither are exclusively reserved for that purpose - and voting has a much more important function, that of communicating with other readers. Always consider that a down-vote may mean nothing more than, "I think this post is less useful than others" - a message which post-score is uniquely suited to communicate, and for which comments are almost entirely unsuitable. – Shog9 Jun 22 '10 at 17:20
@Shog9 that's true, but still there should be at least one comment stating why the answer is bad if it is not so obvious – Tobias Kienzler Jun 23 '10 at 9:50
@tobias: Well, yes, they can be useful. But again, that's a separate matter from voting. – Shog9 Jun 23 '10 at 14:33
I feel exactly as @Kevin has explained in a comment to meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/6521/… and given an option to explain my downvote anonymously I would use it. It is not that I am afraid of any revenge, I just do not want to be seen as the one doing "harm" to to posted (this is esp. when I have posted a competing answer). – Suma Aug 12 '11 at 8:43
@Suma: you only do harm by not downvoting when adequate. But if the reason for a downvote is not obvious it is also doing harm by not explaining to the OP what is wrong. Also sometimes asking first is better since it could be a misunderstanding / language barrier issue – Tobias Kienzler Aug 12 '11 at 10:02
You can convince me (reason), but I doubt you will change how I feel (emotion). If I had an option to provide downvote comments anonymously, I would do it more often (and I do not see what harm would such option do). – Suma Aug 12 '11 at 10:07
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@Suma: I think you're not alone with that opinion, which is exactly why I support this request. Hm, time for another bounty then – Tobias Kienzler Aug 12 '11 at 11:33
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A lot of this has been covered in answers/comments to these questions:

http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/135/encouraging-people-to-explain-down-votes

http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/2263/require-comments-on-downvotes

to name but two.

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I like the idea very much (if it would would work). Anything to get more chance of an explanation for a downvote! There is nothing worse that answering a question to the best of your abilities and then to find it downvoted for no visible reason.

And of course it isn't obvious what's wrong with my answer. If it was so obviously wrong, would I have written it? So couldn't the downvoter have the decency to educate me a little? If the ability to do that anonymously increases the chances of them doing that, then I'm all for it!

On the other hand, there might be disadvantages. If normal comments can't be anonymous, would people start using this system as a way to comment anonymously? But I don't think this disadvantage outweighs the advantages.

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Voting is supposed to be anonymous, and that's how it should be.

That being said, when people downvote without commenting, it's my opinion that usually they're either downvoting obviously incorrect answers or trolling. The former people would not use an anonymous comment function, and the latter would abuse it.

Those who want to leave a meaningful explanation already do; I don't think there's any culture of fear on SO when it comes to revealing that you're a downvoter.

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