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Your analysis is lacking in facts, so let's try working with some:

There have been 78 million upvotes and only 9 million downvotes78 million upvotes and only 9 million downvotes on Stack Overflow so far. That's nearly 9 times the number of upvotes as downvotes.

That makes sense when you think that downvoting requires much more rep than upvoting so fewer people can downvote.

Ahh you counter, it was so much better in the old days, that's skewing all the results. OK, let's restrict ourselves to votes cast from the beginning of this year then...

That would be 12 million upvotes against 1.7 million downvotes12 million upvotes against 1.7 million downvotes, so still around an 8:1 ratio in favour of upvotes.

Maybe it's different for questions as Hans Passant suggests in a comment, but actually it's notbut actually it's not. 25 million question upvotes and 2.6 million downvotes, still 9:1 or so.

So there we have it, downvoting is not more popular than upvoting, and no there's no limit on upvoting posts except the number of people who have at least 15 rep.

Your analysis is lacking in facts, so let's try working with some:

There have been 78 million upvotes and only 9 million downvotes on Stack Overflow so far. That's nearly 9 times the number of upvotes as downvotes.

That makes sense when you think that downvoting requires much more rep than upvoting so fewer people can downvote.

Ahh you counter, it was so much better in the old days, that's skewing all the results. OK, let's restrict ourselves to votes cast from the beginning of this year then...

That would be 12 million upvotes against 1.7 million downvotes, so still around an 8:1 ratio in favour of upvotes.

Maybe it's different for questions as Hans Passant suggests in a comment, but actually it's not. 25 million question upvotes and 2.6 million downvotes, still 9:1 or so.

So there we have it, downvoting is not more popular than upvoting, and no there's no limit on upvoting posts except the number of people who have at least 15 rep.

Your analysis is lacking in facts, so let's try working with some:

There have been 78 million upvotes and only 9 million downvotes on Stack Overflow so far. That's nearly 9 times the number of upvotes as downvotes.

That makes sense when you think that downvoting requires much more rep than upvoting so fewer people can downvote.

Ahh you counter, it was so much better in the old days, that's skewing all the results. OK, let's restrict ourselves to votes cast from the beginning of this year then...

That would be 12 million upvotes against 1.7 million downvotes, so still around an 8:1 ratio in favour of upvotes.

Maybe it's different for questions as Hans Passant suggests in a comment, but actually it's not. 25 million question upvotes and 2.6 million downvotes, still 9:1 or so.

So there we have it, downvoting is not more popular than upvoting, and no there's no limit on upvoting posts except the number of people who have at least 15 rep.

added breakdown into questions/answers
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Robert Longson
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Your analysis is lacking in facts, so let's try working with some:

There have been 78 million upvotes and only 9 million downvotes on Stack Overflow so far. That's nearly 9 times the number of upvotes as downvotes.

That makes sense when you think that downvoting requires much more rep than upvoting so fewer people can downvote.

Ahh you counter, it was so much better in the old days, that's skewing all the results. OK, let's restrict ourselves to votes cast from the beginning of this year then...

That would be 12 million upvotes against 1.7 million downvotes, so still around an 8:1 ratio in favour of upvotes.

Maybe it's different for questions as Hans Passant suggests in a comment, but actually it's not. 25 million question upvotes and 2.6 million downvotes, still 9:1 or so.

So there we have it, downvoting is not more popular than upvoting, and no there's no limit on upvoting posts except the number of people who have at least 15 rep.

Your analysis is lacking in facts, so let's try working with some:

There have been 78 million upvotes and only 9 million downvotes on Stack Overflow so far. That's nearly 9 times the number of upvotes as downvotes.

That makes sense when you think that downvoting requires much more rep than upvoting so fewer people can downvote.

Ahh you counter, it was so much better in the old days, that's skewing all the results. OK, let's restrict ourselves to votes cast from the beginning of this year then...

That would be 12 million upvotes against 1.7 million downvotes, so still around an 8:1 ratio in favour of upvotes.

So there we have it, downvoting is not more popular than upvoting, and no there's no limit on upvoting posts except the number of people who have at least 15 rep.

Your analysis is lacking in facts, so let's try working with some:

There have been 78 million upvotes and only 9 million downvotes on Stack Overflow so far. That's nearly 9 times the number of upvotes as downvotes.

That makes sense when you think that downvoting requires much more rep than upvoting so fewer people can downvote.

Ahh you counter, it was so much better in the old days, that's skewing all the results. OK, let's restrict ourselves to votes cast from the beginning of this year then...

That would be 12 million upvotes against 1.7 million downvotes, so still around an 8:1 ratio in favour of upvotes.

Maybe it's different for questions as Hans Passant suggests in a comment, but actually it's not. 25 million question upvotes and 2.6 million downvotes, still 9:1 or so.

So there we have it, downvoting is not more popular than upvoting, and no there's no limit on upvoting posts except the number of people who have at least 15 rep.

Source Link
Robert Longson
  • 123.6k
  • 13
  • 152
  • 213

Your analysis is lacking in facts, so let's try working with some:

There have been 78 million upvotes and only 9 million downvotes on Stack Overflow so far. That's nearly 9 times the number of upvotes as downvotes.

That makes sense when you think that downvoting requires much more rep than upvoting so fewer people can downvote.

Ahh you counter, it was so much better in the old days, that's skewing all the results. OK, let's restrict ourselves to votes cast from the beginning of this year then...

That would be 12 million upvotes against 1.7 million downvotes, so still around an 8:1 ratio in favour of upvotes.

So there we have it, downvoting is not more popular than upvoting, and no there's no limit on upvoting posts except the number of people who have at least 15 rep.