Hot answers tagged down-votes
76
The motivation behind it is to put emphasis on up-voting or not voting at all. This way, down votes will carry more weight and it will also prevent users from abusing the system by down-voting excessively.
According to what Jeff/Joel discussed on the SO podcast, they wanted to find a way to discourage users from down-voting for less legitimate reasons (say ...
73
There are plenty of websites you can go to if you want humor - SO is supposed to be about providing useful answers to useful questions.
That's why I also vote down the "What's your favorite data structure"-type questions.
They add little of value to SO - if they were phrased as "What's the best data structure in C++ for representing a phone directory", ...
73
No
Voting is anonymous and not even the moderators have access to this information. The only people I suspect that can see is Jeff and the team.
From the comments: Voting data is made anonymous before the data dump is done so this information is not available in the data dump.
Clarification
There are scripts that run that check for voting anomalies that ...
69
Perhaps as well as having an "accepted" answer the OP should have the ability to say "this is not an accepted answer". Display a red cross instead of a green tick - but don't change the votes.
You'd probably want to scrub the flag - and notify the OP - when the post was edited though, otherwise a post which was once wrong but has been corrected would still ...
66
If I'm reading your output correctly, only a small minority of users would even be affected by this. If you pick n = 100, and the ratio you suggest, how many is that exactly of our 596?
And is this really bothering you that much that you're going to pipeline this past all of the other status-planned changes we've been waiting on, just to get these people ...
66
IMHO, he should not bug the OP to accept the answer. SO is a place where knowledgeable and experienced people help out others in need. If you answer it in a way that it creates another question, then the answer is not good enough. So, if the answerer does not want to give more detail to his answer, no problem, it's all voluntary.
BUT, he should not bug OP ...
60
I'm not "afraid" of downvotes in terms of reputation... but I get concerned when I receive downvotes anyway, because it means I may have "been wrong on the Internet"
I don't like being wrong. It gives me a really bad feeling. In particular, because people do (unfortunately) judge answers based on names rather than just content, I'm likely to cause more ...
57
If a comment is wrong, respond to it with another comment. That provides a lot more information than a downvote which could mean anything.
I completely agree with the "undo an accidental upvote" idea, but I don't see any much point in downvoting comments.
In terms of the value of upvoting comments: if a comment indicates that an answer is wrong, the ...
50
Sounds like you're doing it exactly right.
You're downvoting low quality contributions, which is an important part of the site and in the long term, helps taking away the asking privilege from people with consistently terrible questions. Do not ignore bad stuff; downvote it.
Obviously, not directed at you personally but for the sake of a complete answer, ...
47
I'm not going to defend the overall hostility of the comments, which Hans has already apologized for, but one thing bears mentioning, and that is that several people here seem to have thoroughly misunderstood the meaning of one his comments.
People, please, if you don't know what an idiom means, look it up instead of guessing:
pay the piper
to ...
46
C'mon, people. The upvotes on comments mean approximately nothing. Let's have downvotes, too. The more dimensions of pointlessness this site adds, the sooner somebody dies from forgoing food and sleep while using it.
In other words, sure, why not? Plus, wasn't it Jeff himself who said that only having upvoting represents only half the potential ...
46
Down-voting is not a bad thing.
If the answer is not useful as it is because, for example, it contains something that makes it not correct, or not 100% exact, then you can down-vote it. It's important, IMO, to remove the down-vote when the answer is fixed, as the down-vote is not for the user who wrote a non correct answer; the down-vote is for the wrong ...
45
It doesn't necessarily make the question better, though it can do so; in general it provides three things:
A solid indication of what the poster is attempting. This, hopefully, fills in the gaping holes in their explanation of their problem. You can look at the code in addition to the explanation to try to determine what's happening. In the same vein, if ...
43
The reference question and answer for post bans is written with a harsh tone and a bad faith assumption. This bad faith assumption becomes obvious when you consider that a shortened URL is used in the post ban message. It's this kind of bad faith assumption that drives people away from Stack Exchange, and we should be assuming good faith whenever it is ...
41
I disagree with TheTXI on this and I'll keep it short why: a downvote when there are no comments is like saying "that sucks". It's not about the rep.
Do you go to code reviews and say "it sucks"? Do you accept that from someone else? Or are you expected to justify your opinion?
If there already is a constructive comment then it's fair enough to effectively ...
40
My thoughts are this:
I wish people would stop taking everything personal and assume that all downvoting is a vindictive personal attack when 95% of the time it is not.
In the grand scheme of things, the amount of rep you lose from downvotes is absolutely paltry compared to the rep you gain from getting upvotes. We already have an overabundance of upvotes ...
37
I'm definitely against this.
Total SO upvotes cast:
45,555,530
Total downvotes cast:
365,192
For every 1 downvote, there are nearly 125 upvotes cast. This indicates, at least to me, an overall very positive and supportive community!
There will always be people who are either negative-minded or shitdisturbers or maybe just had a bad day. It's ...
35
Given the problems of exposing votes here (evidenced by meta posts), we're now hiding these unless you're the owner. So looking at your own profile, you'll see a detailed list of votes (as you did already, this hasn't changed). Anyone else looking at your page will not see any indication of downvotes, either in the detailed list or in the day totals.
Even ...
35
I have several times asked a question that the "similar questions" search did not identify that I later found to be a duplicate of an existing question when someone pointed it out. I think, then, in the general case that a downvote is probably not appropriate because it is entirely possible that the user did search and did not find a question like their ...
35
I'd also suggest that by having downvotes on comments, you're adding symmetry to the system, that is, treating comments in a similar way as you are treating answers and questions. From a purely UI point of view, maintaining symmetry is a good thing to do; it reduces potential user confusion and increases ease of use.
33
No.
The OP is sometimes severely clueless and short sighted, and may reset to zero answers that think a bit more outside the box, or give general rules that, if followed, would make the problem disappear altogether. It would be frustrating to let one user multiply by zero all the votes for an answer.
Also, on all the occasions where I started to ask ...
33
A 2:1 ratio of upvotes to downvotes is nothing to worry about.
In fact, it's perfectly healthy, and says you're one of the braver users who isn't so concerned with the -1 to their rep on each downvote used to indicate poor quality content. There are a disturbing number of users who will avoid casting a downvote at all costs, even with 10,000+ rep, because ...
33
Being a beginner and trying to learn about C++ or Python or arctan (or anything else) is not a magic cloak that protects against downvotes and exempts you from the cultural norms about writing a good question. Being a beginner at C++ or Python or arctan is different from being a beginner at writing a StackOverflow question.
We have a ton of information ...
31
I have seen many instances of downvoted answers being accepted across at at least half a dozen sites. I cannot think of a single instances where having the accepted answer be at the top in these situations was a good thing. They are almost always some combination of outright wrong, possibly dangers, and at the very least not useful to others. On technical ...
31
I really don't like this "accuracy percent" idea; you're basically discouraging people from downvoting on bad but not closable posts; there are lots of ways your post can be bad but not outright closable.
It's also often the case that a good answer salvages a poor question, or a poor question is kept around because it's popular. It doesn't make sense that ...
31
If I see a bad answer at 0 votes, I generally leave a comment to give the poster a chance to correct or delete it (since the first downvote has been known to trigger a flood of pile-on downvotes). If I check back later and find that it is still wrong and not deleted, I will then downvote.
If a bad answer has already been voted up into, say, the top two or ...
31
No, it's not rude.
If the answer doesn't help you then you can down-vote it if you want. The tool tip states "This answer is not useful".
Personally I'd only down-vote if the answer was actively unhelpful or gave incorrect information, but as @dmckee says I'd comment first just in case there was any misunderstanding.
30
Originally, I thought everyone was right - we don't need to complicate it. But I changed my mind.
When the site first launched - 5 offensive tags would get a post removed. Over time, even a non-offensive post would garner some flags, and since they weren't reset - as t=infinity every post would be deleted. So a decay was added.
Comments now work the ...
30
Developer Art thinks I should apologize and I agree. I am deeply sorry for posting such a horrible and insensitive comment. This is not something I normally do, I almost always try to work with the questioner to get to a resolution, often through a long comment trail. Yesterday was not a great day, I'd like to forget it soon and hope everybody will let ...
30
Downvoting a question containing a SQL injection hardly makes sense. Add a comment highlighting the problem instead - unless it already is the issue that the question is about.
Downvoting an answer that contains a SQL injection is a valid use of your vote IMO, even though it's rarely done. Still, the more important thing to do is to point out the problem in ...
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