I've found many questions here regarding this 'feature' and many answers explaining how it works, but none showing any 'philosophical' concept behind it. i.e., why is it here? Is it helping to make site better?

For example, just now I made a downvote, retracted it to think a bit more, left a comment with explanation and tried to downvote again. No game.
And this is not the only real-life situation when value of this 'feature' is doubtful. There're plenty on this meta.

So, what was the primary reason to introduce it? A flow of people who change all their votes on daily basis?

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1 Answer

up vote 14 down vote accepted

If I remember correctly it's to prevent people from downvoting competing answers. For example, say I answer an easy question then notice that five other people posted basically the same answer at the same time. I could just downvote them all so my answer is the top one, and slightly more likely to get the first few upvotes. Once I get a comfortable lead of 2-3 votes I can then go back and undo all the downvotes to get my five reputation points back and to cover my tracks. This sort of thing is prevented by vote locking.

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Correct. From If you just witnessed tactical downvoting, is it a reportable offense?: To help deal with the "tactical downvoting" problem, we have radically reduced the window for undoing votes. – Arjan Jan 19 '11 at 13:47
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Thanks! Isn't that a bit like curing headache with an axe? We can deal with tactical downvoting without enforcing irrelevant (and sometimes harmful) rule on the whole community. (Not sure if I need to create another question with 'feature-request' tag for that) – Nikita Rybak Jan 19 '11 at 13:52
@Nikita: I'm sure alternate suggestions would be welcome (yes, as a separate feature-request post). 99% of all voting interactions are a single click with no take backs, so the locking rule really isn't that impactful. – Bill the Lizard Jan 19 '11 at 13:55
That is one neat idea – abel Jan 19 '11 at 14:40
Just for the record: posted. – Nikita Rybak Apr 25 '11 at 9:25
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"it's to prevent people from downvoting competing answers" But it doesn't. You can still downvote everyone else, lose a little rep, and gain it all back when your answer gets upvotes. All this rule does is makes tactical downvoting more harmful to the victims. – endolith May 9 '12 at 19:59
@endolith Like I said, they can't cover their tracks, so if you suspect someone of tactical downvoting just flag it and we'll take a look. – Bill the Lizard May 9 '12 at 20:14
@BilltheLizard: How could someone be suspected of it when votes are anonymous? How would you distinguish between tactical downvoting and downvoting everyone else's answers because they're wrong? If tactical downvoting isn't even a significant problem, why cripple the site over it and lock-in erroneous votes that permanently give subtly wrong answers more prominence than they deserve? – endolith May 10 '12 at 1:31
@endolith Chillax. Once a post is edited the vote is unlocked and can be removed or reversed. Nothing is crippling the site. – Bill the Lizard May 10 '12 at 1:41
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@BilltheLizard: Of course it is. How do you change your vote if the post is never edited, but a comment or another answer shows that your vote was wrong? – endolith May 10 '12 at 1:53
@endolith Anyone can suggest an edit at any time. If your vote was wrong, edit the post. Even if that wasn't possible, an undeserved downvote or two is a far cry from crippling the site. Things seem to be working out okay. – Bill the Lizard May 10 '12 at 2:06
@BilltheLizard: Yes, we're aware of the hacky workaround for the bug in the site's policies. It's still a bug. – endolith May 10 '12 at 2:43
@BilltheLizard. I flaged once a thread that all good answer got downvoted except one (bad answer wasn't down voted...) the mod response was that even the mods can't know who is responsible for a specific downvote, so... something in the mod "polic" is broken. (except the fact the punishment for serial downvote is way too easy , many times just a warning telling the bastard to be smarter with his disgusting actions, do you want an example?) – user173320 May 17 '12 at 23:37
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@BilltheLizard: I initially upvoted an answer, only to find out that it actually didn't answer the OP's question. So I answered it myself, and wanted NOT TO DOWNVOTE, but to remove my initial upvote. Because of this provision, I can't. If this feature intends to prevent tactical downvotes, then please let me retract my upvote. – Dan Dascalescu Sep 30 '12 at 4:45
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@BilltheLizard Gotcha. I see what it's attempting to solve now. Just off the top of my head, I think a better solution would be not to reward rep points on an undone downvote. – chaiguy Nov 28 '12 at 23:58
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