110 reputation
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bio website minecraft.codeemo.com
location phoenix
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visits member for 1 year, 2 months
seen Apr 19 at 21:07
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May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
@sixlettervariables Misuse of words then--not 'discourse', clarification. Exactly as you said; encouraging clarification (and not requiring it) is bad? Has this whole thread been understood as 'comments should be REQUIRED for downvoting' (which is quite clearly not my position)?
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
@sixlettervariables well, that's perhaps your only reason you can think of, and maybe even most people's. But even if I am an SO newbie, what bad is done in encouraging (who said 'requiring'???) discourse?
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
@sixlettervariables who's mad? I was hoping to provide what I believe to be a means to encourage productivity. Flagging comments does nothing, true, but isn't the whole idea of this meta discussion about rep cost to propose ideas that incur changes to the status quo? Downvotes happen, and they mostly happen anonymously; this won't change--I'm not trying to eliminate that ability, either, as you can see--just giving incentive to not be anonymous--'perk' as you will. The hostile opposition to this idea as an augmentation is...surprising.
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
let us continue this discussion in chat
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
@AndrewtheStupid ...'There is no compelling reason to think Comments and Votes should be connected'... has it occurred to you this is a means to change that? You seem to be under the impression that I could (under my proposal), put at risk USEFUL comments? Right now I can falsely flag USEFUL comments--what measures will stop this? My idea encourages people to flag useless comments...and patterns that emerge from abuse would be more prevalent then.
May
2
awarded  Commentator
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
There's nothing in place to currently protect against "revenge downvoting", other than the inability to afford it. Should somebody be discouraged from downvoting a strictly bad post simply because of those costs, or can we provide a means to transform the desire to downvote into constructive commenting (and if not constructive, the comment would be not rewarding?)
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
@AndrewtheStupid How are you continuing to miss the main premise of my proposition then? If somebody REVENGE DVing doesn't leave comments, they're experiencing the exact same behavior as currently in place: paying with rep to DV. If they DO leave comments that are of no consequence, they're opening themselves up to site-wide flagging (that is, people reading their comments would flag it), which would be a useful process in weeding out abusive behavior by bringing their behavior to the forefront.
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
@AndrewtheStupid So what exactly is my proposition failing to address? I could go and 'revenge downvote' you, putting myself into single digits and you would have no idea why (irrelevant that I lack the currency or its impact would be insignificant), or I could 'revenge downvote' you and post worthless comments to reimburse myself. Which one would more easily be detectable as abuse and be punishable?
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
Quite frankly, I have no problem with the costs incurred to downvote--and I don't mind if people do so anonymously--and as yourselves--have sufficient currency to downvote 4800 answers and questions, but that is all beside the point: such a system that I am suggesting encourages more helpful actions (editing/constructive comments) rather than anonymous dismissing and downvoting, which provides very little benefit to the community at large. It's not increasing the costs for you to anonymously downvote, it's increasing the comparative cost versus doing something helpful.
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
@sixlettervariables So both of you have STRICTLY PROVEN my point. Yes, you have downvoted me and you say 'cost you nothing', but it cost you your time and effort, and most importantly, if it was not constructive, I could FLAG it, which is another mechanism that could conceivably be employed to protect from abusive downvotes, e.g., for a flagged comment ruled unconstructive, its impact (reimbursing the rep) could be undone.
May
2
comment If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
@AndrewtheStupid Neither of you seem to see that this is an extension of the current system. "Did I downvote or upvote or even vote at all?"--I sure don't need to know--the OP doesn't address the recipient, he is concerned about the one CASTING the vote. Thus, for you to downvote me, costs you (as it already does). In addition, I received a response knowing WHO potentially downvoted me and I can ascertain their intent (success).
May
2
awarded  Teacher
May
2
answered If downvoting is so important, why does it cost reputation?
Mar
27
awarded  Student
Mar
27
awarded  Scholar
Mar
27
comment What characteristics of asking a given question receive more cooperation from SO?
As a newbie to SO myself (as a registered user, at least), I have much less frame of reference of the climate of SO in 2008; if the expectations have changed much since then, that is exactly the information I need to know to color my reaction to these sorts of "discrepancies". thank you all for your inputs!
Mar
27
accepted What characteristics of asking a given question receive more cooperation from SO?
Mar
27
comment What characteristics of asking a given question receive more cooperation from SO?
Reading his article corroborates how A's question is not ideal; admittedly, there are plentiful areas for improvement. This does not, however, seem to warrant the pseudo-hostilities that came as a result. Apparently, you are alleging, in 2008, reading the documentation was NOT required for posting on SO (or at least, you weren't downvoted for it), as the answer was as easily found then as today: (docs.python.org/release/2.5.2/lib/module-random.html)
Mar
27
comment What characteristics of asking a given question receive more cooperation from SO?
Looking at the conclusion of this question I think only exemplifies my point: the question was more expansive than the question it is alleged to have duplicated. Evidence 1) answer depended on a pairing, which was solved with zip(). 2) the answer was for sample() rather than single-element choice(). In my opinion, that feels less and less like a duplicate, but rather just the snowballing product of the initial skepticism and downvoting.