Timeline for How do we avoid downvotes without a comment?
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
8 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sep 4, 2015 at 15:34 | comment | added | usefulBee | @jmort253, downvoting is a behavior, and when it is not followed by a comment, in a lot of cases it is a bad one. Many people in the past suggested to tie downvoting with a brief comment but unfortunately the dominating gangster culture suppresses those attempts by also downvoting and deletions. While your answer is polite and inspired by good intentions, which I appreciate, but in a culture of gangsters, it could do the opposite. | |
Sep 4, 2015 at 4:02 | comment | added | jamesmortensen | @usefulBee there aren't too many situations where we can control the behaviors of others, but we can most certainly control our own behaviors and how we react to every situation. Remember, the voting isn't about the person but instead is about the content. | |
Sep 3, 2015 at 20:29 | comment | added | usefulBee | This is an unrealistic advise that does not deal with tons of illogical down votes...and obviously nothing is done about it because of justifications, like yours, for a bad system that has been going for so long. | |
Jun 21, 2014 at 6:59 | comment | added | brasofilo | @Toskan: this is not positive at all: would the down voting and close voting fanatics mind to share their off the hook reasoning? . . . And looks like there's a pattern... :/ | |
Jun 21, 2014 at 4:40 | comment | added | Dennis Meng | For what it's worth, I just saw a post yesterday that got to -5 fairly quickly. I was almost positive it would get closed soon after (and downvoted further), but I noticed that the asker wasn't confrontational, kept a fairly cool head, and cleaned up their post as much as they could. Sure enough, when I peeked at the question today, not only is it still open, some of the downvotes were removed and now the post score is back to a 0. That's the kind of turnaround we'd like to help facilitate (if not even better). | |
Jun 21, 2014 at 2:39 | comment | added | jamesmortensen | @Toskan, in those situations, you have an opportunity to lead. Say something like "Hey, does anyone see how I can edit this to make it fit better?". Chances are, if it is a borderline case, you and the community could pull it farther back from the line to where folks don't see the problems anymore. Even if you don't think it's off-topic, primarily opinion based, etc, editing to improve still benefits everyone. Some of the best questions I've ever encountered on Stack Exchange started out as borderline questions that were collaboratively edited into true gems. Hope this helps. | |
Jun 21, 2014 at 2:28 | comment | added | Toskan | i totally agree with you on my tone. What I dislike to read though is the part about "This question fits to google groups" this reason to close a question gets used too often. There is not only black and white, but there are gray tones, and there is more than not, an answer, that is better, and more correct, than another one for a specific use case. It is a shame that people start closing these kind of questions, even though there IS a best answer out there. | |
Jun 21, 2014 at 2:19 | history | answered | jamesmortensen | CC BY-SA 3.0 |