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How in the world does a question like this, https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23894387/php-constantly-updating-script, get an upvote? Does Stack Overflow suffer from as many drive-by upvotes as it does drive-by downvotes? How can we prevent that behavior? Are upvoters also looking for answers to these same questions?

I have noticed this behavior a lot on the PHP tag. Anecdotally, I have also noticed a much lower bar for question quality on that tag and typically burn through my close votes pretty rapidly there.

At the time that I wrote this query the post in question consisted of the first two paragraphs. The OP has added some code and additional explanation since then. Link to that revision.

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    Because PHP. You really needed further explanation? May 27, 2014 at 16:42
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    Thanks for making me actually laugh out loud @RobertHarvey! May 27, 2014 at 16:43
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    This happens on all kinds of questions. In the .NET tag every question about audio, video, speech and image processing will be upvoted, regardless of the quality of the question. I guess it's people thinking "Ooh nice, I don't understand that".
    – CodeCaster
    May 27, 2014 at 16:46
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    This is way, way, way more of a problem than downvotes. It's both way more prevalent, way more destructive, and much less likely to be noticed (and therefore addressed). It just doesn't make (most) people angry, so they don't come here and complain about undeserved upvotes (much), unlike the pretty much daily posts complaining about undeserved downvotes.
    – Servy
    May 27, 2014 at 16:49
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    Random upvotes happen everywhere, same as random downvotes. Sometimes, I think cosmic radiation triggers the flipping of a bit somewhere. I don't know that there's a general trend of this kind of voting.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    May 27, 2014 at 17:05
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    Related: Do users upvote out of sympathy, and how should that be addressed?.
    – user456814
    May 27, 2014 at 17:13
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    I always upvote any questions I come across that don't seem stupid or very terribly worded. Also try to upvote newcomers' question regardless of quality. May 27, 2014 at 19:41
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    "Also try to upvote newcomers' question regardless of quality" ... i wish i could downvote comments.
    – Kevin B
    May 27, 2014 at 19:52
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    @VioletGiraffe, you do realize you are just enabling them to write terrible questions. Why not help them improve their question quality, then upvote when it actually deserves it? May 27, 2014 at 20:32
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    @dfsq It's just that, the original revision deserved them.
    – Servy
    May 27, 2014 at 20:37
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    How ironic, after some drive-by upvotes it also got hit by drive-by downvotes. May 27, 2014 at 20:47
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    If you want an explanation, look no further than the Electorate badge. Granted, it's more balanced now than it was when question downvotes gave a penalty to the downvoter. But still, this misguided badge encourages mass voting on questions for motives other than the only motive that should count: to increase visibility of a good question. May 27, 2014 at 20:59
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    Oh nice! I don't understand this question. +1. May 28, 2014 at 3:06
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    they downvote like they eat chips
    – user3586251
    May 29, 2014 at 11:14
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    @dondom: Most of the times, that's because those questions deserve downvotes. If you don't want to get downvoted, write a good question with proper formatting and all that. Period. May 29, 2014 at 11:52

4 Answers 4

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Why do some people upvote bad questions?

Some people upvote without considering the quality or usefulness of the post, and is very common in the tag (which contains a lot of people who are newbies and have no idea what they're doing).

Who are all these people, you ask? Well, there can be many explanations, but these are the ones I think to be most plausible:

  • Another beginner/newbie - Another user who read the question and felt "Oh, this looks interesting." may upvote it. They don't care about the question's quality at all. They don't even take anything else into consideration while voting on a post. They don't care if the question is poorly asked, badly researched, or poorly worded — if they somehow find the question interesting, they might upvote it.

  • A high-rep user who sympathizes the OP - These people, when they see a question at -1, will have a natural tendency to upvote it to make the vote count neutral. I've often seen comments like "+1 to counter" and similar on very poorly asked questions. Not all high-rep users do this, but some do. And they're destroying the quality of the site by encouraging the asker to post similar questions in the future.

  • A sockpuppet - It would seem unlikely that a person would create a sockpuppet just to upvote their question. But you can't even imagine what ends people go to find a way to have their question answered. Some of them may even have a sockpuppet factory which they use for gaining the "initial traction" (i.e. to make the question look like a good one).

How can we prevent this behavior?

You can't. All of the above groups are not helping the site. If anything, they're harming the site by encouraging stupid questions. Unfortunately, people are free to vote as they see fit, so long as they're not involved in a voting fraud.

The only thing we can do to help this situation is to close such questions quickly. Not all such questions need to be closed — some of them can be salvaged with a good edit. As Jeff notes in this blog post, we need to optimize for pearls, while giving bad questions the treatment they deserve.

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  • "a lot of people who are newbies and have no idea what they're doing"... u think ur special? wait. NO.
    – user3586251
    May 29, 2014 at 11:17
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    People going for the Electorate badge area also partly to blame here. May 29, 2014 at 11:43
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    @dondom: I never said I'm special. You should take a look at php to see what I'm talking about. These upvotes actually cause a great deal of harm. First of all, you're encouraging someone who is making terrible contributions to the site. Second, upvotes affect a lot of calculations such as reputation of the asker, and the question-ban algorithm. If a poor question gets a few pity upvotes, it will encourage the user and will eventually result in many more similar questions. May 29, 2014 at 12:00
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    Your answer is well formatted but the content is lacking. There are many reasons why things are upvoted and downvoted. These categories are too broad. Remember the reason for the voting system is that the criteria is subjective. What you consider to be a stupid question may be completely reasonable to me. I might see what the OP is getting at, but you might think its not enough info to diagnose. Your answer reads like a partisan politician complaining that you want more people to vote as long as they are voting for you.
    – nsfyn55
    May 29, 2014 at 19:10
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    @nsfyn55 You seem to be missing the point of my answer, and the question that was asked. The question was "why are these poor questions getting uovotes?". My answer is addresses the most probable scenarios. There can't be a definitive list of all possible downvote reasons - voting is anonymous and people are free to vote as they see fit. May 29, 2014 at 20:04
  • Meh I still find your categories to be lacking. The only one I consider of merit is "Another Beginner" these being folks that do not yet understand the voting system or its purpose. The other two I can't say I have ever seen. Sockpuppeting seems like way more trouble than its worth.
    – nsfyn55
    May 29, 2014 at 20:11
  • There's an inherent problem with this question: it assumes some objective or universal definition of "bad". If you can understand everyone's definition of good or bad, you may find an answer to your question. Some focus on content, others focus on format or grammar... others? Etc...
    – Astara
    May 29, 2017 at 6:45
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Even though the asker is going waaay down the wrong path, it is otherwise a good question:

  • It does not suffer the X/Y Problem.
  • The user has actually tried something and has code in the question.
  • Aside from some punctuation, it is otherwise well-written.

It's getting downvotes because he doesn't know what he's doing (and seems to have the standard problem of separating PHP and Javascript), but I really don't think it deserves quite that many.

Honestly? I upvoted it, too. The question "shows research effort; it is useful and clear", albeit a bit too broad to correct all his misconceptions, as Brad Koch said in a comment on it.

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    The original question was just the first two paragraphs. It has been edited to include code and additional information since I posted my original query. May 27, 2014 at 20:21
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    Original question: stackoverflow.com/revisions/23894387/1
    – Nick Q.
    May 27, 2014 at 20:30
  • @JayBlanchard It's still getting downvotes, hence my answer. Besides, the first bullet point (probably the most important one for a question like this) still applied.
    – Izkata
    May 27, 2014 at 20:35
  • @NickQ. See prior comment
    – Izkata
    May 27, 2014 at 20:37
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    But was the question, as originally posted, worth an upvote @Izkata? May 27, 2014 at 20:38
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    @JayBlanchard I would not have upvoted or downvoted the original
    – Izkata
    May 27, 2014 at 20:41
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    Many probably wouldn't have, but it was upvoted nearly immediately - before the DV landslide began. May 27, 2014 at 20:43
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    @JayBlanchard I don't know php, so might I ask what about the edit made the difference between a bad question and a good one? Did you learn something that you would have needed to know in order to answer it? May 27, 2014 at 23:18
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    "How could I achieve [stated goal] with PHP?" is a valid question in my opinion because it has a definite answer: AJAX. It's very likely that someone might Google that question and find the answer useful. (Agree the question in its original form was not deserving of an upvote).
    – Nick Coad
    May 28, 2014 at 3:06
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    @SamIam the edits made a difference two ways. a.) it showed that the OP had actually made an effort to try to do what he was asking and 2.) provided people who will create answers some insight into his thought process as far as what he was trying to achieve. May 28, 2014 at 12:42
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    @JayBlanchard point a.) is fairly unimportant. Focusing too much on if the OP proved their worthiness is a faults of the meta community at SO. When I'm browsing google to find answers to my question, I don't care at all whether or not the OP made an effort. The only thing I need from the question is the ability to match it to my own. And the same goes for when I'm answering a question. I don't need the op to add a bunch of extra text to read through to prove that they're worthy. All I need and want is the necessary context to be able to answer the question. Everything else is noise. May 28, 2014 at 14:15
  • @JayBlanchard Point 2.) is important, and that's what I was asking for. Did you actually get any extra useful insight from the edit? May 28, 2014 at 14:16
  • @SamIam I did get useful insight from the edit. On point a.) I thought this was important given all the discourse about question quality lately. In addition that is one of the core tenets of SO, is it not? May 28, 2014 at 14:19
  • @gnack AJAX is not the definite answer. There are other ways. This (creating a chat) is a way too broad topic for SO. One could write a book about it.
    – kapa
    May 29, 2014 at 9:31
-1

Some people upvote "wicked" answers

And I guess because they think it is cool

How do I know? This comment:

Ya, this doesn't really fix the issue the questioner (and I) is trying to solve, but I upvoted just because THAT'S WICKED! Thanks, @MrSampson. :) – Name Omitted (3,946) Mar 7 '13 at 17:27

on this fascinating incorrect answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/10961978/103081

I'm guessing he learned something "cool", perhaps it was that \! invokes a bash shell from the mysql client, and although that had nothing to do with finding out why chdir wouldn't work from there it was good enough for him to +1....

The wrong answer, same number of votes as mine (until I downvoted, by 1), posted 9 months late back in 2012 as a first post by someone who has no other SO contributions, and admitted as wrong by the poster, was apparently never downvoted until I ran across it tonight from a upvote ping to my answer.

I suppose I am part to blame for not noticing or it until now, but I am disappointed that admitted wrong answers could get 4 upvotes and no downvotes at all on a question with 6000+ views.

The best thing I can say about the wrong answer, is that he admits about a day later that it is incorrect. By then he has received a minor 3 char code edit and a congrats on a good first answer by an experienced user.

Asking others to help downvote something like this seems socially awkward.

EDIT: I've been reminded in comments that flagging something like this would likely be rejected as invalid. And, it takes time to evaluate, the answer isn't obviously crap until reviewed and it helps to have a little subject matter expertise. So I posted here. Incidentally, I'm also aware that my answer here could potentially be deleted as an "I'm having that problem too" kind of pseudo-answer.

So to contribute, comparing with @Amal's answer above, the behavior seems different.

Sockpuppet? Well, the answer poster left and never came back. He admitted the answer was wrong, if you were creating a illicit rep-mined account for someone you wouldn't do that.

Compassion voting? On a wrong answer? That doesn't make sense either. In my opinion, the standard for questions seems to be questions are allowed to be wrong and misguided if they are reasonably complete, show some effort, and answerable. Not answers.

Another beginner? No. Experienced users upvoted an answer that the poster himself said was incorrect.

Thinking as graciously as I can, there is this slim argument that a shell escape could be more useful than a single system command to someone who didn't want to exit the mysql client but needed to do work elsewhere. But then, ^Z would be just as cool, and neither answer the question.

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    You mention "flagging" twice in your answer here. In the case you point out, any flag you'd raise on the answer would be declined. None of the non-custom flags apply, and a custom flag would be declined on the basis that the fact that an answer is wrong is not sufficient for moderator action.
    – Louis
    May 29, 2014 at 11:12
  • Yes, now that you mention it, that has been my experience flagging things occasionally for being egregiously wrong. And, besides, there is even an argument that a shell escape could be useful to someone who temporarily needs to work in a different directory and can't do that with single shell commands.
    – Paul
    May 29, 2014 at 11:14
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I do it if its reasonably asked.

Some people are not only newbies in the actual subject but total newbies in etiquette of what is seen as an accceptable effort in trying to help yourself.

With a negative vote, they wont get answers and the question is shunned.

I remember the very first days when I asked for technical help (sometime in 2000). Back when the best technical support came from forums(boards). And my ignorant self went an posted what was a very shallow, unresearched question on a hard core Linux dev forum. I was shredded to pieces, resurrected, my raw wounded-self sprinkled with pepper and chillies, shredded again... and so on.

It was a hard lesson, but the kind moderator welcomed me to the board(old-school community etiquette) and gave me a quick but very good lesson on how to approach technical boards/forums without sounding like some leeching dumb fart, even if I was one at that point. He directed me to the general/newbie section where you introduced yourself and everyone had a beer-shaking-"cheers!!" shouting mood. I read other newbie questions and learnt from that as a result.

So in Stackoverflow, many get so wrought up in being those faceless, technical exchanges and forget that there are real people who are ABSOLUTELY NEW, who stumble across or have heard good things about Stackoverflow.

I know quality is important, but also remembering that there will always be TOTAL NEWBIES at both etiquette and subject matter is just as important as points and quality.

We're all newbies at something.

But there are some who are newbies at just asking

TL,DR... I know

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    Upvoting bad questions doesn't teach anyone anything, and is harmful to the site. Downvoting should tell them they're doing something wrong (which they can further investigate - clicking "help" at the top of the screen is probably a fairly logical start, and should get one pretty far in learning what's appropriate). By all means kindly explain the problem in the comments, but don't upvote the questions. May 29, 2014 at 19:25
  • Commenting also helps in encouraging the person to correct their question before eagerly downvoting out of irritation. After commenting, and after a response from the OP without a correction, a downvote is deserved. Thats just what I would do
    – tinonetic
    May 29, 2014 at 19:27
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    Commenting and downvoting are not mutually exclusive. You downvote to tell the entire world that the post is not a good post. You comment to help the post author to fix it. Doing one doesn't prevent you from doing the other. Both are entirely appropriate things to do. And you say that the downvotes discourage them from getting answers. That's a good thing. We don't want people answering bad questions. We want the question author to fix it into a good question before having it answered.
    – Servy
    May 29, 2014 at 19:41
  • Doing them in sequence if a comment is ignored is what my point was. Not supporting bad questions, merely explaining empathy that drives "driveby upvotes".There are as many drive by downvotes as there are upvotes. Downvotes without explanation/comment are those that I think attract the random "counter"
    – tinonetic
    May 29, 2014 at 19:48

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