Many things have been said in the Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change. blog post. I want to examine a particular statement:
Let’s reject the false dichotomy between quality and kindness. Quality matters because it means posts can help more people. But a larger, more diverse community produces better artifacts, not worse ones. We need to stop justifying condescension with the pursuit of quality, and we need better tools and queues to help power users trying to keep quality high.
That might seem like a reasonable paragraph. After all, being "condescending" is hardly necessary for getting rid of bad content. And I think we would all welcome "better tools and queues" for taking out the trash.
But it becomes less reasonable in conjunction with this:
Let’s stop judging users for not knowing things. (We’re a Q&A site!) It makes me sad when someone get downvoted for posting a duplicate.
This is problematic. Not merely because it attempts to pass off the old "someone gets downvoted" canard (we downvote posts, not people, and it is highly discouraging to me that an actual employee for the company that invented this policy cannot tell the difference). But because it sets a very dangerous precedent: it makes the statement that downvotes are unkind.
Voting is the most fundamental tool that we as SO users have for determining the difference between good content and bad content. Without voting, quality doesn't exist. And downvoting is just as important as upvoting for this purpose.
If you're looking through a list of questions to answer, and you see a -3, you know that you don't need to bother looking any further at that question. Don't click on it, don't even read the title. If you're looking for a question worth answering, move along to something else.
This is the primary purpose of downvotes: to act as a signpost to other users as to the quality of the post in question.
This is where the dichotomy between quality and kindness comes in. You cannot declare downvoting of any kind to be a hostile act. Because once you do, you make it difficult for people to erect those quality signposts. And without that, how will people more effectively avoid bad content?
A duplicate can be a bad question in addition to being a duplicate. Maybe it's poorly formatted, worded, or is just a useless restatement of something we already have. To declare that such a downvote is improper, that it is not our right to cast such a vote, is to work against quality in favor of kindness.
This statement causes even more concern:
They get downvoted, but don’t know why
Again, there is the conflation of downvoting the post with downvoting the person. But there's also a fundamental misunderstanding of the purpose of voting.
Votes aren't for the benefit of the post; they're for the benefit of people who read the post later. They direct us to good content and allow us to avoid wasting time with bad content.
Any explanation of why that downvote was cast is essentially irrelevant to that purpose. Why? Because that would be part of the post, and the purpose of downvoting the post is to keep people from reading it. To tell them that reading it is a waste of time and they should go elsewhere.
So such a comment would only be useful for people who are fascinated by downvoted questions... or the person who asked it. And while I certainly understand the impulse to help the OP improve the post, that's ultimately dealer's choice.
Especially since a lot of people cannot handle criticism of any form, polite or unkind.
But sometimes, it's just not appropriate to comment because there's nothing that can be improved. If you've asked a question that can be answered via a cursory examination of easily found documentation, there's no way to fix that. No matter how well-stated that question is, it's still about something you could have found via Google. And is therefore worthy of a downvote.
An explanation would be pointless in such cases. And indeed, I would go so far as to say that it would be extremely difficult to provide an explanation that would be considered "kind". RTFM is generally aggressive, no matter how you phrase it.
To require downvotes to come with explanations, even if they're anonymous, will in no way improve our ability to direct people to quality posts. Indeed, it will hinder it, since some people just won't downvote (since they'd have to compose a comment or select something from a box) when they otherwise would have.
So once again, we see that the dichotomy between quality and kindness is not false; it is genuine in some cases. If you want quality, you cannot declare that downvotes (and close votes for that matter) are unkind under any circumstances.
Are there other circumstances where the "false dichotomy" presented in the blog is a true dichotomy?
discussion
and is a sensible starting point for discussion; it's fine.people still perceive downvotes as a slight on them in the sense that we're telling them the content that they write is bad and not worth considering.
Which is a problem with the people that perceive things that way, full stop. This is a site for professional developers. If a professional can't accept the fact that they've produced work that is poor, and then take steps to correct that, then they have no hope of being a successful professional. The world's purpose goes beyond affirming the incompetence of emotionally frail people.