Skip to main content
added 34 characters in body
Source Link
duplode
  • 34.3k
  • 9
  • 64
  • 108

My instinctive suspicion about this suggestion is that even if multiple downvotes were hidden, most people who feel unwelcome because of downvoting now would still feel unwelcome, only for other reasons: because extra effort is asked of them, or because their posts get criticised, or because their questions are closed, or because they get quetsion banned, and so forth. Questions like "Is Stack Overflow unwelcoming?" seem to induce a confusing mix of perception and reality (cf. this recent ruckus), and my gut feeling is that a change like this one would drag us a little further into that.

Now, if I suspend the aforementioned feeling (say, by telling myself "It's okay, this might make at least some people happier, and perhaps the site would run more smoothly as a consequence"), I end up with a view rather similar to the one held by Makoto: this wouldn't be an unreasonable PR move, but it would bring in a lot of practical complications. I will mention a few additional ones:

  • If no one sees the real negative scores below -1, there is a risk that very few people will be aware that further negative votes count and are important for several moderation mechanisms. (It is important to keep in mind that many -- and probably most -- regular contributors with high reputation aren't Meta regulars.) That might be mitigated by showing real negative scores to 1k+ users (i.e. the ones currently able to see the score breakdown).

  • I'm not entirely convinced this change would deliver us from pitycounterbalancing upvotes. My home tag is [haskell], one of the "nicest" language tags you'll find, one in which dogpiles are relatively rare -- and yet I regularly see incomprehensible upvotes being cast on poor questions with -1 score.

  • Would "mak[ing] downvotes worth the same as upvotes for negative-scored posts" mean that, given a 0 score question, a downvote followed by an upvote would lead to a different reputation change than an upvote followed by a downvote? That would feel rather arbitrary. (Or is the idea that reputation for a post would be recalculated every time it crossed the 0 score boundary?)

My instinctive suspicion about this suggestion is that even if multiple downvotes were hidden, most people who feel unwelcome now would still feel unwelcome, only for other reasons: because extra effort is asked of them, or because their posts get criticised, or because their questions are closed, or because they get quetsion banned, and so forth. Questions like "Is Stack Overflow unwelcoming?" seem to induce a confusing mix of perception and reality (cf. this recent ruckus), and my gut feeling is that a change like this one would drag us a little further into that.

Now, if I suspend the aforementioned feeling (say, by telling myself "It's okay, this might make at least some people happier, and perhaps the site would run more smoothly as a consequence"), I end up with a view rather similar to the one held by Makoto: this wouldn't be an unreasonable PR move, but it would bring in a lot of practical complications. I will mention a few additional ones:

  • If no one sees the real negative scores below -1, there is a risk that very few people will be aware that further negative votes count and are important for several moderation mechanisms. (It is important to keep in mind that many -- and probably most -- regular contributors with high reputation aren't Meta regulars.) That might be mitigated by showing real negative scores to 1k+ users (i.e. the ones currently able to see the score breakdown).

  • I'm not entirely convinced this change would deliver us from pity upvotes. My home tag is [haskell], one of the "nicest" language tags you'll find, one in which dogpiles are relatively rare -- and yet I regularly see incomprehensible upvotes being cast on poor questions with -1 score.

  • Would "mak[ing] downvotes worth the same as upvotes for negative-scored posts" mean that, given a 0 score question, a downvote followed by an upvote would lead to a different reputation change than an upvote followed by a downvote? That would feel rather arbitrary. (Or is the idea that reputation for a post would be recalculated every time it crossed the 0 score boundary?)

My instinctive suspicion about this suggestion is that even if multiple downvotes were hidden, most people who feel unwelcome because of downvoting now would still feel unwelcome, only for other reasons: because extra effort is asked of them, or because their posts get criticised, or because their questions are closed, or because they get quetsion banned, and so forth. Questions like "Is Stack Overflow unwelcoming?" seem to induce a confusing mix of perception and reality (cf. this recent ruckus), and my gut feeling is that a change like this one would drag us a little further into that.

Now, if I suspend the aforementioned feeling (say, by telling myself "It's okay, this might make at least some people happier, and perhaps the site would run more smoothly as a consequence"), I end up with a view rather similar to the one held by Makoto: this wouldn't be an unreasonable PR move, but it would bring in a lot of practical complications. I will mention a few additional ones:

  • If no one sees the real negative scores below -1, there is a risk that very few people will be aware that further negative votes count and are important for several moderation mechanisms. (It is important to keep in mind that many -- and probably most -- regular contributors with high reputation aren't Meta regulars.) That might be mitigated by showing real negative scores to 1k+ users (i.e. the ones currently able to see the score breakdown).

  • I'm not entirely convinced this change would deliver us from counterbalancing upvotes. My home tag is [haskell], one of the "nicest" language tags you'll find, one in which dogpiles are relatively rare -- and yet I regularly see incomprehensible upvotes being cast on poor questions with -1 score.

  • Would "mak[ing] downvotes worth the same as upvotes for negative-scored posts" mean that, given a 0 score question, a downvote followed by an upvote would lead to a different reputation change than an upvote followed by a downvote? That would feel rather arbitrary. (Or is the idea that reputation for a post would be recalculated every time it crossed the 0 score boundary?)

deleted 1 character in body
Source Link
duplode
  • 34.3k
  • 9
  • 64
  • 108

My instinctive suspicion about this suggestion is that even if multiple downvotes were hidden, most people who feel unwelcome now would stillstill feel unwelcome, only for other reasons: because extra effort is asked of them, or because their posts get criticised, or because their questions are closed, or because they get quetsion banned, and so forth. Questions like "Is Stack Overflow unwelcoming?" seem to induce a confusing mix of perception and reality (cf. this recent ruckus), and my gut feeling is that a change like this one would drag us a little further into that.

Now, if I suspend the aforementioned feeling (say, by telling myself "It's okay, this might make at least some people happier, and perhaps the site would run more smoothly as a consequence"), I end up with a view rather similar to the one held by Makoto: this wouldn't be an unreasonable PR move, but it would bring in a lot of practical complications. I will mention a few additional ones:

  • If no one sees the real negative scores below -1, there is a risk that very few people will be aware that further negative votes count and are important for several moderation mechanisms. (It is important to keep in mind that many -- and probably most -- regular contributors with high reputation aren't Meta regulars.) That might be mitigated by showing real negative scores forto 1k+ users (i.e. the ones currently able to see the score breakdown).

  • I'm not entirely convinced this change would deliver us from pity upvotes. My home tag is [haskell], one of the "nicest" language tags you'll find, one in which dogpiles are relatively rare -- and yet I regularly see incomprehensible upvotes being cast on poor questions with -1 score.

  • Would "mak[ing] downvotes worth the same as upvotes for negative-scored posts" mean that, given a 0 score question, a downvote followed by an upvote would lead to a different reputation change than an upvote followed by a downvote? That would feel rather arbitrary. (Or is the idea that reputation for a post would be recalculated every time it crossed the 0 score boundary?)

My instinctive suspicion about this suggestion is that even if multiple downvotes were hidden most people who feel unwelcome now would still feel unwelcome, only for other reasons: because extra effort is asked of them, or because their posts get criticised, or because their questions are closed, or because they get quetsion banned, and so forth. Questions like "Is Stack Overflow unwelcoming?" seem to induce a confusing mix of perception and reality (cf. this recent ruckus), and my gut feeling is that a change like this one would drag us a little further into that.

Now, if I suspend the aforementioned feeling (say, by telling myself "It's okay, this might make at least some people happier, and perhaps the site would run more smoothly as a consequence"), I end up with a view rather similar to the one held by Makoto: this wouldn't be an unreasonable PR move, but it would bring in a lot of practical complications. I will mention a few additional ones:

  • If no one sees the real negative scores below -1, there is a risk that very few people will be aware that further negative votes count and are important for several moderation mechanisms. (It is important to keep in mind that many -- and probably most -- regular contributors with high reputation aren't Meta regulars.) That might be mitigated by showing real negative scores for 1k+ users (i.e. the ones currently able to see the score breakdown).

  • I'm not entirely convinced this change would deliver us from pity upvotes. My home tag is [haskell], one of the "nicest" language tags you'll find, one in which dogpiles are relatively rare -- and yet I regularly see incomprehensible upvotes being cast on poor questions with -1 score.

  • Would "mak[ing] downvotes worth the same as upvotes for negative-scored posts" mean that, given a 0 score question, a downvote followed by an upvote would lead to a different reputation change than an upvote followed by a downvote? That would feel rather arbitrary. (Or is the idea that reputation for a post would be recalculated every time it crossed the 0 score boundary?)

My instinctive suspicion about this suggestion is that even if multiple downvotes were hidden, most people who feel unwelcome now would still feel unwelcome, only for other reasons: because extra effort is asked of them, or because their posts get criticised, or because their questions are closed, or because they get quetsion banned, and so forth. Questions like "Is Stack Overflow unwelcoming?" seem to induce a confusing mix of perception and reality (cf. this recent ruckus), and my gut feeling is that a change like this one would drag us a little further into that.

Now, if I suspend the aforementioned feeling (say, by telling myself "It's okay, this might make at least some people happier, and perhaps the site would run more smoothly as a consequence"), I end up with a view rather similar to the one held by Makoto: this wouldn't be an unreasonable PR move, but it would bring in a lot of practical complications. I will mention a few additional ones:

  • If no one sees the real negative scores below -1, there is a risk that very few people will be aware that further negative votes count and are important for several moderation mechanisms. (It is important to keep in mind that many -- and probably most -- regular contributors with high reputation aren't Meta regulars.) That might be mitigated by showing real negative scores to 1k+ users (i.e. the ones currently able to see the score breakdown).

  • I'm not entirely convinced this change would deliver us from pity upvotes. My home tag is [haskell], one of the "nicest" language tags you'll find, one in which dogpiles are relatively rare -- and yet I regularly see incomprehensible upvotes being cast on poor questions with -1 score.

  • Would "mak[ing] downvotes worth the same as upvotes for negative-scored posts" mean that, given a 0 score question, a downvote followed by an upvote would lead to a different reputation change than an upvote followed by a downvote? That would feel rather arbitrary. (Or is the idea that reputation for a post would be recalculated every time it crossed the 0 score boundary?)

Source Link
duplode
  • 34.3k
  • 9
  • 64
  • 108

My instinctive suspicion about this suggestion is that even if multiple downvotes were hidden most people who feel unwelcome now would still feel unwelcome, only for other reasons: because extra effort is asked of them, or because their posts get criticised, or because their questions are closed, or because they get quetsion banned, and so forth. Questions like "Is Stack Overflow unwelcoming?" seem to induce a confusing mix of perception and reality (cf. this recent ruckus), and my gut feeling is that a change like this one would drag us a little further into that.

Now, if I suspend the aforementioned feeling (say, by telling myself "It's okay, this might make at least some people happier, and perhaps the site would run more smoothly as a consequence"), I end up with a view rather similar to the one held by Makoto: this wouldn't be an unreasonable PR move, but it would bring in a lot of practical complications. I will mention a few additional ones:

  • If no one sees the real negative scores below -1, there is a risk that very few people will be aware that further negative votes count and are important for several moderation mechanisms. (It is important to keep in mind that many -- and probably most -- regular contributors with high reputation aren't Meta regulars.) That might be mitigated by showing real negative scores for 1k+ users (i.e. the ones currently able to see the score breakdown).

  • I'm not entirely convinced this change would deliver us from pity upvotes. My home tag is [haskell], one of the "nicest" language tags you'll find, one in which dogpiles are relatively rare -- and yet I regularly see incomprehensible upvotes being cast on poor questions with -1 score.

  • Would "mak[ing] downvotes worth the same as upvotes for negative-scored posts" mean that, given a 0 score question, a downvote followed by an upvote would lead to a different reputation change than an upvote followed by a downvote? That would feel rather arbitrary. (Or is the idea that reputation for a post would be recalculated every time it crossed the 0 score boundary?)