| bio | website | blog.shounig.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Los Angeles, CA | |
| age | 15 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 10 months |
| seen | May 6 at 5:10 | |
| stats | profile views | 417 |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user And you guys still have issues with anonymity and grudges? A user can see if I vote to close their question and it eventually gets closed. That can certainly stir up some grudges. So don't tell me the system advocates anonymity, because the system now appears to contradict itself. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user You guys are dwelling way too much on the rare possibilities that you have brought up. That's true about comments, @Bart, but either way, we don't even know that users would react that way with information about a deleted user. That which can be assumed without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. Hypotheticals get us nowhere. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user Commenting is an indirect indicator of vote direction, should that be removed too? |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user But this feature does not even directly enable you to do that. Just because it is an indirect effect of it, it should not be considered? Absurd. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user Good God. You cannot vote without an account. Anonymity is BY ITS NATURE a privilege attached to an account. But forget the nature of voting and anonymity. It just makes sense to show you which question/answer had the vote removed because it's your post and you always have the right to know the vote counts on your own posts. So which supersedes the other: poster privilege or voter privilege? |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user @Bart: No, it is inherent. Once you join, you have the option to vote anonymously. Offsite, you can't put a sticky-note on something that says "downvote." It is an on-site privilege just by the nature of websites... |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user And then, if you return, you regain your anonymity with all future votes. And it's not like every single past vote will become publicized with your name. This is just a byproduct of the system. I'd like to know which answer of mine somebody agreed or disagreed with. It all contributes to the learning experience. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user But that is too extreme a case to consider. What will they do? They know this person downvoted them, will they beat them to death? Jeez...these claims are all ridiculous. The two situations I see are this: you are banned for doing something wrong, or you ask to be banned. In the former, you, by the standards of the community, no longer deserve the privileges of membership, one of which is anonymity. In the latter, you willingly relinquish such. And, in any case, there are plenty of ways you can deduce who has downvoted you. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user Martijn, that is stupid. If they can no longer access that account, why should we put forth effort in protecting the anonymity of it? It is different with users who are not banned; they may eventually return. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user Ah, yes. That's the issue. Favoritism or, on the flipside, grudges. Can a user ever play favorites with a deleted user? Of course not. The user may end up knowing who voted, but they can do nothing with the information. They can't go and upvote that person's stuff since it is no longer attributed to that user. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user @Bart: I understand that it happens, but I don't think that this request should be dismissed on the grounds that someone may or may not look into the issue further. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user You didn't answer my question. I know voting is important. Tell me why it's important that it remains anonymous. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user Okay, let's chew on that a bit. What do you personally believe is the reason that voting anonymity is important? |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user @Bart: It is ridiculous to assume that just because a few people might investigate recently deleted users and make sense of the situation that every user will do the same. This is the same argument for having the favorites system: very few people actually use it, so does it need to be around? Yes, to appease those few people. If this happens to help a small population of users on the site disclose the identity of the voters, I see no issue in it. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user Wait, so when you are notified that this user upvoted your question (and you know it is that question because the system tells you), that doesn't reveal information, but when the upvote is removed by the user (or, in this case, removed due to the circumstances of the user being removed), it becomes revealing? This is illogical. |
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Apr 23 |
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Identify question upon reputation loss from removed user This is an incredibly ridiculous claim. You can tell just by comments, which people leave willingly, that they have upvoted or downvoted a question. It is no more revealing than comments to show which post the reputation was deducted from. |
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Apr 19 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Apr 10 |
awarded | Enlightened |
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Apr 10 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Mar 22 |
awarded | Enlightened |





