As I've read through recent discussions like Is this really what we should consider "unwelcoming"? and Feedback on the Comment Classifier blog post, I've started to notice a theme. There are two things that are being said pretty widely:
New users are far more put off by having their questions downvoted without explanation, and would prefer to know what they're doing wrong (example 1, example 2, example 3, example 4 in a comment). (BTW, since I can't figure out how to link directly to comments, I'm copying the comment from example 4 here so it can be read):
Posting a question on SO as a new user and having it downvoted and closed without comments would feel much worse to me than receiving some comments that aren't overtly nice. I would greatly prefer to be told like it is than to simply be swept aside because the people making that decision decided they had nothing nice to say to me about it.
Oh, and example five: What can we do to encourage (or discourage) a second question? This one is particularly interesting because it includes a large-scale data analysis of newbie behavior, and found (based on the analysis) that the most effective way to encourage a newbie to engage with the site was to leave a comment.
Experienced users are hesitant to leave comments when they downvote, because they have learned that it often leads to retaliatory downvotes. Most the examples I could find were from comments, and I don't know how to link directly to comments, so here's the text of those examples:
I'm not a fan of silent downvotes myself, b/c if someone thinks there's anything wrong with my answers I'd like to know what that is, so I can either fix it or explain their misunderstanding. However, I also see the other side of this. I tend to comment when downvoting, explaining what I consider wrong with a post, and I have received my share of revenge downvotes for doing so. I can see why people prefer silent downvotes. And I don't think making a downvote reason mandatory would help in the least. IMO that'd only lead to less downvotes, and in turn to decreased content quality.
Source: deep in the comments on the Is this really what we should consider "unwelcoming"? thread.
I personally do not recommend downvoting after trying to be helpful. It just gives them a target... speaking from personal experience.
Source: the fifth comment on https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/370819
Leaving a comment accompanying a downvote can lead to negative consequences, like revenge downvoting and even off-site harassment. Many experienced users will tell you that they used to leave helpful comments along with their downvotes, but have stopped doing so because of the unpleasant blowback they received from unreasonable users.
Source: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/357437/ (emphasis in original). This one was not a comment, but I quoted it anyway to excerpt the most relevant part of the answer.
Moderation is almost always viewed negatively - There's nothing like having your question closed to bring out the snark, colorful language and even revenge downvoting.
Source: Curation and cynicism: Or why Stack Overflow sometimes doesn't seem welcoming (again, not a comment but I excerpted the most relevant part for this discussion)
I've had it with being beaten up over comments. I'm just not going to post any, at all, on questions from low-rep users. No requests for clarification, no hints, no quick answer 'cos I don't want the rep or can't be bothered dupe-linking. Just no comments at all. They'll still have the guns and will still want to shoot me, but Imma taking all the ammo.
Source: the ninth comment (or the seventh comment before clicking the "show N more comments" link) on Curation and cynicism: Or why Stack Overflow sometimes doesn't seem welcoming
I could go on (and on and on), but I think the examples I've posted so far are probably enough to give a feel for the two horns of the dilemma. New users feel that it's unwelcoming when their questions are downvoted without feedback, while experienced users trying to curate the site hesitate to give feedback, because they don't yet know which of two categories this new user will fall into:
- The kind who will be grateful for that feedback, and improve, or:
- The kind who will take it (wrongly)* as a personal attack, and engage in revenge downvoting or make snarky, hostile comments in return.
* I'm not, here, talking about the times when the feedback is actually hostile. I'm talking about when the feedback is something like "What is the specific error message you got?" or "You need to post an MCVE or we won't be able to help you".
So how do we solve this?
I suspect that the best action the Stack Exchange team could take, the action that would provide the biggest "bang for the buck" in terms of long-term effect, would be to find ways to reduce people's reluctance to explain their downvotes. In particular, I think Raise flag for obvious revenge downvotes (posted four years ago on Meta.SO), or Check for revenge voting directed against question closers (posted seven(!) years ago on Meta.SE) would be good features to implement. (And note the end of Raise flag for obvious revenge downvotes: "Yes, I'm aware there is already a reversal script - it doesn't catch it." - Emphasis mine).
I believe that leaving these feature requests unimplemented for so long was a mistake on Stack Exchange's part, as it has led to the vicious cycle described above where people get burned out on leaving feedback, and then new users feel unwelcomed when their questions are silently downvoted or closed. But the flipside of this mistake is an opportunity: if Stack Exchange would implement these features, that would go a long way towards undoing the damage. If people felt safe leaving feedback on bad questions, knowing that the automatic tools can catch revenge downvoting and that the moderators can take care of personal-attack comments, I believe we might see an increase in feedback left on new users' questions, and then the kind of users that we want to attract to the site would actually stick around and continue to contribute.
But this post is tagged discussion
, not feature-request
, for a reason. My goal is not (solely) to mention these feature requests that I believe have been unfortunately neglected. I also want to start a discussion. For that purpose, I have two questions for those with some experience in the "trenches" of downvoting, revenge downvoting, and the like.
Questions
Do you personally feel that if revenge downvotes were far more difficult, or caught and corrected better by the script, you would be more likely to leave comments explaining why a question is bad?
Are there any other ways that you can think of to mitigate the problem of downvotes with no feedback?