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[(its = possessive, it's = "it is" or "it has". See for example <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Gv0H-vPoDc&t=1m20s> and <https://www.wikihow.com/Use-Its-and-It%27s>.)] - but another pronoun is probably more appropriate.
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Peter Mortensen
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One way to encourage people to cast more downvotes would be to make downvotes not bad for the downvoted party. The people who like downvoting will probably continue to downvote anyway and the people who dislike downvoting because of its effects on the other party will be more inclined to do so.

If a downvote didn't affect the user receiving it'sits reputation at all or if a downvote was worth a modest positive amount like +1, but did make the question less visible to others, then I think users would be more inclined to graciously accept downvotes as constructive-but-nonspecific negative feedback from the community.

I think this would reinforce the idea that downvotes are not personal.

People's natural inclination is to treat all criticism as personal, and counteracting this inclination requires the consequences of the criticism to be clearly isolated to one particular issue.

One way to encourage people to cast more downvotes would be to make downvotes not bad for the downvoted party. The people who like downvoting will probably continue to downvote anyway and the people who dislike downvoting because of its effects on the other party will be more inclined to do so.

If a downvote didn't affect the user receiving it's reputation at all or if a downvote was worth a modest positive amount like +1 but did make the question less visible to others, then I think users would be more inclined to graciously accept downvotes as constructive-but-nonspecific negative feedback from the community.

I think this would reinforce the idea that downvotes are not personal.

People's natural inclination is to treat all criticism as personal, and counteracting this inclination requires the consequences of the criticism to be clearly isolated to one particular issue.

One way to encourage people to cast more downvotes would be to make downvotes not bad for the downvoted party. The people who like downvoting will probably continue to downvote anyway and the people who dislike downvoting because of its effects on the other party will be more inclined to do so.

If a downvote didn't affect the user receiving its reputation at all or if a downvote was worth a modest positive amount like +1, but did make the question less visible to others, then I think users would be more inclined to graciously accept downvotes as constructive-but-nonspecific negative feedback from the community.

I think this would reinforce the idea that downvotes are not personal.

People's natural inclination is to treat all criticism as personal, and counteracting this inclination requires the consequences of the criticism to be clearly isolated to one particular issue.

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One way to encourage people to cast more downvotes would be to make downvotes not bad for the downvoted party. The people who like downvoting will probably continue to downvote anyway and the people who dislike downvoting because of its effects on the other party will be more inclined to do so.

If a downvote didn't affect the user receiving it's reputation at all or if a downvote was worth a modest positive amount like +1 but did make the question less visible to others, then I think users would be more inclined to graciously accept downvotes as constructive-but-nonspecific negative feedback from the community.

I think this would reinforce the idea that downvotes are not personal.

People's natural inclination is to treat all criticism as personal, and counteracting this inclination requires the consequences of the criticism to be clearly isolated to one particular issue.