Timeline for Limiting downvoting on questions by new users who haven't had a chance to respond to requests for improvement
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
5 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Oct 28, 2019 at 23:56 | comment | added | Hans Passant | Be sure to look at the editing history. This user invited a lot of communities to their question. Add the crappy problem of caching, and the company's instance in not fixing their "Ask question" page, to understand how many users had a good reason to vote. | |
Oct 28, 2019 at 20:26 | comment | added | Cindy Meister | @codygray That's fine. If we were voting to cap yes/no my vote would be a resounding NO. Especially if there are sympathy UV - where I "live" I don't see that so much. Perhaps a high number of DV triggers more UV? Or perhaps it's the culture of different tags / programming languages? That would be an interesting study... FWIW Office devs tend to exist in a much closer relationship to non-devs than other programming languages. I'm certain that skews how we relate to these things :-) | |
Oct 28, 2019 at 20:22 | history | edited | Cindy Meister | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Additional thoughts
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Oct 28, 2019 at 20:22 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | It is one thing for community members to follow some sort of informal contract where they deem a single downvote as “good enough”, but I have real concerns about systematically preventing anyone from expressing their opinion about the quality of a post through the voting system. Why should my opinion that a question is “unclear or not useful” be suppressed just because someone else had that same opinion and expressed it first? Furthermore, sympathy upvotes are real, and some users will +1 anything. So, unless we also cap upvotes, capping downvotes (even at -3) would lead to serious vote skew. | |
Oct 28, 2019 at 20:15 | history | answered | Cindy Meister | CC BY-SA 4.0 |