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clarification / additional hints
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Micka
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I think the problem is kind of imbalanced.

"This answer is useful" => how to answer that? Yes, for me it is useful, so there is at least one person for which the answer is useful, so I can upvote and know that this is a right action.

"This answer is not useful" => ok, for me it isn't. Should I downvote all answers which are (currently) not useful for me? How can I tell, that this answer won't be usefult for anyone else? There might be some hints, but from statement logic's points of view, I can't tell whether "this is not useful" from my subjective point of view.

Similar for question's tooltip of upvote/downvote. "Research effort" looks completely different for beginners and domain experts. Where's the limit?

It is easy to tell "I like that question/answer" or "This question/answer helped me" and it is still easy to say "for me, I see no worth in that question/answer".

But it is hard to tell "there will be nobody who gets any help from this question/answer". This includes the question, whether I have enough competence to detect whether a question/answer is meaningful or not. That's not always the case. But if you, in general, support downvotes, anyone who is disappointed from some posting could harm someone, who has spent time and maybe has given an answer that is useful for many others. Sounds discouraging to me.

Why should I discourage anyone on asking questions? Why should I discourage anyone on answering, even it it's only opinion-based?

I like the gamification aspects, mentioned earlier here, that you could get reward from downvoting, once a question is closed (I would split a total reward to all the downvoters, but that's a detail). However, there are still possibilities to exploit this.

I think the problem is kind of imbalanced.

It is easy to tell "I like that question/answer" or "This question/answer helped me" and it is still easy to say "for me, I see no worth in that question/answer".

But it is hard to tell "there will be nobody who gets any help from this question/answer". This includes the question, whether I have enough competence to detect whether a question/answer is meaningful or not. That's not always the case. But if you, in general, support downvotes, anyone who is disappointed from some posting could harm someone, who has spent time and maybe has given an answer that is useful for many others. Sounds discouraging to me.

Why should I discourage anyone on asking questions? Why should I discourage anyone on answering, even it it's only opinion-based?

I like the gamification aspects, mentioned earlier here, that you could get reward from downvoting, once a question is closed (I would split a total reward to all the downvoters, but that's a detail). However, there are still possibilities to exploit this.

I think the problem is kind of imbalanced.

"This answer is useful" => how to answer that? Yes, for me it is useful, so there is at least one person for which the answer is useful, so I can upvote and know that this is a right action.

"This answer is not useful" => ok, for me it isn't. Should I downvote all answers which are (currently) not useful for me? How can I tell, that this answer won't be usefult for anyone else? There might be some hints, but from statement logic's points of view, I can't tell whether "this is not useful" from my subjective point of view.

Similar for question's tooltip of upvote/downvote. "Research effort" looks completely different for beginners and domain experts. Where's the limit?

It is easy to tell "I like that question/answer" or "This question/answer helped me" and it is still easy to say "for me, I see no worth in that question/answer".

But it is hard to tell "there will be nobody who gets any help from this question/answer". This includes the question, whether I have enough competence to detect whether a question/answer is meaningful or not. That's not always the case. But if you, in general, support downvotes, anyone who is disappointed from some posting could harm someone, who has spent time and maybe has given an answer that is useful for many others. Sounds discouraging to me.

Why should I discourage anyone on asking questions? Why should I discourage anyone on answering, even it it's only opinion-based?

I like the gamification aspects, mentioned earlier here, that you could get reward from downvoting, once a question is closed (I would split a total reward to all the downvoters, but that's a detail). However, there are still possibilities to exploit this.

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yivi
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I think the problem is kind of imbalanced.

It is easy to tell "I like that question/answer" or "This question/answer helped me" and it is still easy to say "for me, I see no worth in that question/answer". But

But it is hard to tell "there will be nobody who gets any help from this question/answer". This includes the question, whether I have enough competence to detect whether a question/answer is meaningful or not. That's not always the case. But if you, in general, support downvotes, anyone who is disappointed from some posting could harm someone, who has spent time and maybe has given an answer that is useful for many others. Sounds disencouragingdiscouraging to me.

Why should I discourage anyone on askigasking questions? Why should I discourage anyone on answering, even it it's only opinion-based?

I like the gamification aspects, mentioned earlier here, that you could get reward from downvoting, once a question is closed (I would split a total reward to all the downvoters, but that's a detail). However, there are still possibilities to exploit this.

I think the problem is kind of imbalanced.

It is easy to tell "I like that question/answer" or "This question/answer helped me" and it is still easy to say "for me, I see no worth in that question/answer". But it is hard to tell "there will be nobody who gets any help from this question/answer". This includes the question, whether I have enough competence to detect whether a question/answer is meaningful or not. That's not always the case. But if you, in general, support downvotes, anyone who is disappointed from some posting could harm someone, who has spent time and maybe has given an answer that is useful for many others. Sounds disencouraging to me.

Why should I discourage anyone on askig questions? Why should I discourage anyone on answering, even it it's only opinion-based?

I like the gamification aspects, mentioned earlier here, that you could get reward from downvoting, once a question is closed (I would split a total reward to all the downvoters, but that's a detail). However, there are still possibilities to exploit this.

I think the problem is kind of imbalanced.

It is easy to tell "I like that question/answer" or "This question/answer helped me" and it is still easy to say "for me, I see no worth in that question/answer".

But it is hard to tell "there will be nobody who gets any help from this question/answer". This includes the question, whether I have enough competence to detect whether a question/answer is meaningful or not. That's not always the case. But if you, in general, support downvotes, anyone who is disappointed from some posting could harm someone, who has spent time and maybe has given an answer that is useful for many others. Sounds discouraging to me.

Why should I discourage anyone on asking questions? Why should I discourage anyone on answering, even it it's only opinion-based?

I like the gamification aspects, mentioned earlier here, that you could get reward from downvoting, once a question is closed (I would split a total reward to all the downvoters, but that's a detail). However, there are still possibilities to exploit this.

Source Link
Micka
  • 20.1k
  • 11
  • 3

I think the problem is kind of imbalanced.

It is easy to tell "I like that question/answer" or "This question/answer helped me" and it is still easy to say "for me, I see no worth in that question/answer". But it is hard to tell "there will be nobody who gets any help from this question/answer". This includes the question, whether I have enough competence to detect whether a question/answer is meaningful or not. That's not always the case. But if you, in general, support downvotes, anyone who is disappointed from some posting could harm someone, who has spent time and maybe has given an answer that is useful for many others. Sounds disencouraging to me.

Why should I discourage anyone on askig questions? Why should I discourage anyone on answering, even it it's only opinion-based?

I like the gamification aspects, mentioned earlier here, that you could get reward from downvoting, once a question is closed (I would split a total reward to all the downvoters, but that's a detail). However, there are still possibilities to exploit this.