In my opinion, it can show a person's attitude towards the community. Thoughts?
-
If it's about up-votes to down-votes ratio on meta... maybe, I don't know.– user202729Mar 21, 2018 at 1:11
-
@user202729 I don't see how Meta is any different in this regard.– Robert ColumbiaMar 21, 2018 at 1:13
-
@RobertColumbia "it can show that the community agree with them"?– user202729Mar 21, 2018 at 1:14
-
4@user202729 I think the question is about the number of upvotes and downvotes they've cast... which doesn't really tell you much other than whether they use downvotes a lot.– CatijaMar 21, 2018 at 1:15
-
@user202729 character and agreement are two separate concepts. It's like claiming that because someone has the same taste in automobiles as you, they are therefore a better person.– Robert ColumbiaMar 21, 2018 at 1:16
-
2So... look like I've misunderstood the question, as Catija pointed out.– user202729Mar 21, 2018 at 1:16
-
1@Catija yes, I interpreted it that way too, otherwise the question is more or less equivalent to judging based on rep.– Robert ColumbiaMar 21, 2018 at 1:17
-
1@Catija Yes, that's what I meant. Thanks.– TachyonMar 21, 2018 at 1:57
-
1I'm sorry, why are people downvoting? Is there anything wrong with the question or is it cause you don't share the same opinion?– TachyonMar 21, 2018 at 2:06
-
5@Tachyon, What would you consider to be the optimum ratio of upvotes to downvotes?– Stephen Rauch ModMar 21, 2018 at 2:26
-
1The votes here show the voters attitude towards the community. And I think they are right.– reneMar 21, 2018 at 6:57
-
3"To someone unfamiliar with the site and how things operate here, at first glance a high number of downvotes would seem to indicate harsh treatment of others. That's not at all the case."– Brad Larson ModMar 21, 2018 at 11:44
-
1This only makes sense if users are encountering an equal number of good and bad posts every day and that just isn't true, especially if you spend a lot of time in review queues (and probably certain tags).– BSMPMar 21, 2018 at 15:53
-
1do people have to downvote every question in the review queue No, and they most likely don't. But 1) you're still encountering questions AND answers that are more likely to have problems because you're looking at posts that got flagged and 2) not all questions under review get valid/helpful answers. Sometimes they have zero answers. Sometimes the answers are wrong. Sometimes the thing you're reviewing IS an answer post (because what got posted wasn't an attempt to answer at all).– BSMPMar 21, 2018 at 18:32
-
2If 85% of the posts someone sees fits the criteria for being down voted it doesn't make sense for their voting record to be 50/50. That would mean they're either not voting or even up voting things that should be down voted.– BSMPMar 21, 2018 at 18:37
2 Answers
Someone that routinely downvotes poorly researched, incomplete, or off-topic questions is actually among one of the best people here. They're helping us weed out the garbage and push the poor content to the bottom of the heap to make room for the good content.
Someone that routinely upvotes poorly researched, incomplete or off-topic questions is actively harming the site by making it harder to find good and high quality questions and answers.
I didn't realize that "mean" was at play when doing janitor work here.
If they're rude in comments, that's a different matter. Flag that.
-
1Fair enough but upvoting on-topic questions is as important as downvoting off-topic questions.– TachyonMar 21, 2018 at 2:22
-
3
-
2So you're saying it is a good idea: the lower the up/down ratio, the better the candidate. ;)– jscsMar 21, 2018 at 3:03
-
3@JoshCaswell: Well, no. I'm saying that they're probably doing a lot of curating of bad content. Trying to extrapolate whether or not they'd make a good moderator from votes alone is silly... ;)– MakotoMar 21, 2018 at 3:08
-
2This is one of those metrics that in theory could mean something, but in reality is so unreliable and drowned in noise that it's not really any better than judging by height or by 3rd grade math scores. Mar 21, 2018 at 3:14
-
2
No.
Votes on Stack Overflow are about content, not posters. Voting here has nothing to do with "character". Upvoting is not "virtuous" any more than downvoting is antisocial.
-
Thanks for sharing your opinion but if a person downvotes a lot, wouldn't that mean that they are mean-spirited? I'm trying to keep an open mind; however, I'm not convinced by your answer.– TachyonMar 21, 2018 at 1:55
-
9@Tachyon here is the famous example of user you call "mean-spirited" - stackoverflow.com/users/88656/eric-lippert?tab=topactivity... Mar 21, 2018 at 2:58
-
1@Tachyon "a lot" is really subjective, do you consider it a lot if a person gives 5 downvotes in one day? 15? If they have a 2/5 downvote to upvote ratio? 4/5? And even so... why would this ever be considered mean-spirited? Since when is an evaluation of the utility of a post mean? Sure, a person could be mean and even rude if they write a comment to the user, but the downvotes are not mean. See the other answer as to why downvotes can be and are good.– Davy MMar 21, 2018 at 6:47