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Aug 4, 2015 at 16:44 comment added Peter Duniho "unless someone else would downvote" -- that's my point. Your proposal is specifically boosting the score of the answer exactly when others have already indicated it's a bad answer. It also fails to award the extra vote even when the questioner hasn't up-voted the answer while anyone else has. So bad answers (those with downvotes) tend to be rewarded, while good answers (those with upvotes) tend not to be. Granted, the effect is small, but a) so is the effect of the lack of any change, and b) whatever the magnitude of the effect, it's rewarding and punishing exactly the wrong behaviors.
Aug 4, 2015 at 16:40 comment added Vesper @PeterDuniho Sorry for vague explanations. In fact, this system does not allow the asker to double-vote, unless someone else would downvote, because if the asker would upvote, the answer will have a score of 1 and thus not eligible for an extra point for being accepted.
Aug 4, 2015 at 16:15 comment added Peter Duniho Sorry...your proposal wasn't stated clearly. It appeared to me you were setting the vote value to +1. That said, with your clarification, your proposal is nearly the same as the one I already made, except that you would allow the poster of a question to effectively double-vote for an answer. I.e. you would award the extra vote even if the question poster had already up-voted the answer; while this is not quite as bad as setting a floor, it still has the similar effect of preferentially rewarding bad answers, just to a lesser degree.
Aug 4, 2015 at 15:25 comment added Vesper @PeterDuniho How come it's a floor? It's a net +1 for acceptance if an accepted answer has 0 or less. That is, if an answer has -2, and has been accepted, its net value in total tag score (each tag) will be -1 against -2 right now. No "floor of +1".
Aug 4, 2015 at 14:21 comment added Vesper @PeterDuniho "Bad" answer? There might be no one around to say the answer is actually good, not even the asker (they had 1 rep, haha). This is indeed the case with low-traffic tags (I had a silver in AS3 in almost three years and 500+ answers, and about half of them were not upvoted by anyone, while many were accepted). And for high-traffic tags, peer review will quickly downhill an accepted answer if it's really bad, resulting in negative tag score gain. So I propose a balanced (IMO) solution that impacts low-traffic tags better than high-traffic tags.
Aug 4, 2015 at 14:08 comment added TylerH @PeterDuniho Acceptance indicates the answer was helpful and solved the problem, regardless of its score. I would downvote a CSS answer that said not much more than "use !important with the property" because it is low quality and bad advice, but if the asker tries and finds that it works (it probably would), then the asker is well within their right to accept that answer. Votes are a reflection of an answer's perceived value by the community, but acceptance is currently solely the purview of the asker.
Aug 3, 2015 at 21:22 comment added Peter Duniho "+1 will be awarded if an accepted answer has 0 or less score" -- so in other words, if a questioner accepts a bad answer, that will actually reward the answerer? This proposal has "unintended harmful consequences" written all over it. And frankly, it seems like a worse version of the heavily-downvoted proposal I gave (i.e. grant the +1 toward the badge for an accepted answer, but only if the person posting the question didn't up-vote the answer).
Aug 3, 2015 at 7:42 comment added Vesper @Loko Yes, effectively equalizing answering questions for those users that can't upvote with those which OPs can upvote. Reputation gain will still be different, but tag proficiency will progress even if OPs cannot upvote.
Aug 3, 2015 at 7:36 comment added Loko So this would mean that a 0 score accepted answer gives the same as a +1 accepted answer?
Aug 3, 2015 at 7:31 comment added tom redfern I would certainly support this.
Aug 3, 2015 at 6:58 history answered Vesper CC BY-SA 3.0