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duplode
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Quoting a relevant MSE answer (note that while the answer itself wasn'twas originally posted by a regular MSE user, the paragraph I quoted was added later by a staff member):

We discussed changing the post notice language for users who do have permissions but decided to leave it as-is, so that still indicates that both the post owner and those with close/reopen vote privileges can see the names. Because post owners are still able to see who voted to close/reopen their question by going into the post history, it would be inaccurate to say that they do not have access to that information. It's merely harder to reach (and lower rep users are much less likely to find it).

The hiding is not meant to be watertight (for that, it would likely be necessary to hide the list of names from everyone), but merely to make it harder to reach. I tend to agree this is the right balance. In particular, if a question's timeline ever becomes useful (for instance, if it is relevant to a dispute that reaches Meta), it is better if everyone, including the question author, sees it in the same way.

Also relevant: this MSE answer by Shog. While it predates the change to the closure notice that also hid the names from the question author, it casts a different light on the broader point of the hiding. It is especially worth noting that making retaliation less likely was never the only motivation for such changes.

Quoting a relevant MSE answer (note that while the answer itself wasn't originally posted by a regular MSE user, the paragraph I quoted was added later by a staff member):

We discussed changing the post notice language for users who do have permissions but decided to leave it as-is, so that still indicates that both the post owner and those with close/reopen vote privileges can see the names. Because post owners are still able to see who voted to close/reopen their question by going into the post history, it would be inaccurate to say that they do not have access to that information. It's merely harder to reach (and lower rep users are much less likely to find it).

The hiding is not meant to be watertight (for that, it would likely be necessary to hide the list of names from everyone), but merely to make it harder to reach. I tend to agree this is the right balance. In particular, if a question's timeline ever becomes useful (for instance, if it is relevant to a dispute that reaches Meta), it is better if everyone, including the question author, sees it in the same way.

Also relevant: this MSE answer by Shog. While it predates the change to the closure notice that also hid the names from the question author, it casts a different light on the broader point of the hiding. It is especially worth noting that making retaliation less likely was never the only motivation for such changes.

Quoting a relevant MSE answer (note that while the answer itself was originally posted by a regular MSE user, the paragraph I quoted was added later by a staff member):

We discussed changing the post notice language for users who do have permissions but decided to leave it as-is, so that still indicates that both the post owner and those with close/reopen vote privileges can see the names. Because post owners are still able to see who voted to close/reopen their question by going into the post history, it would be inaccurate to say that they do not have access to that information. It's merely harder to reach (and lower rep users are much less likely to find it).

The hiding is not meant to be watertight (for that, it would likely be necessary to hide the list of names from everyone), but merely to make it harder to reach. I tend to agree this is the right balance. In particular, if a question's timeline ever becomes useful (for instance, if it is relevant to a dispute that reaches Meta), it is better if everyone, including the question author, sees it in the same way.

Also relevant: this MSE answer by Shog. While it predates the change to the closure notice that also hid the names from the question author, it casts a different light on the broader point of the hiding. It is especially worth noting that making retaliation less likely was never the only motivation for such changes.

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

Quoting a relevant MSE answer (note that while the answer itself wasn't originally posted by a regular MSE user, the paragraph I quoted was added later by a staff member):

We discussed changing the post notice language for users who do have permissions but decided to leave it as-is, so that still indicates that both the post owner and those with close/reopen vote privileges can see the names. Because post owners are still able to see who voted to close/reopen their question by going into the post history, it would be inaccurate to say that they do not have access to that information. It's merely harder to reach (and lower rep users are much less likely to find it).

The hiding is not meant to be watertight (for that, it would likely be necessary to hide the list of names from everyone), but merely to make it harder to reach. I tend to agree this is the right balance. In particular, if a question's timeline ever becomes useful (for instance, if it is relevant to a dispute that reaches Meta), it is better if everyone, including the question author, sees it in the same way.

Also relevant: this MSE answer by Shog. While it predates the change to the closure notice that also hid the names from the question author, it casts a different light on the broader point of the hiding. It is especially worth noting that making retaliation less likely was never the only motivation for such changes.