The last few days I've been getting seemingly random downvotes on my questions, but I've worked out that it's likely the same user doing it.
Here is my reputation history for the last few days:
(The above image has been edited to remove irrelevant information)
I think it is the same user doing it because:
- Every downvote was made at around the same time each day (so if I am being targeted, the downvoter might be doing it on their lunch break);
- I've recently had a disagreement with a couple of users here on Meta (where their answers were later deleted)
- There's only a pattern of one downvote a day (in contrast if someone's sharing my questions it'd be likely that it would attract more than one downvote)
- I've never got downvotes in this capacity before, and the random start to 'a downvote a day' is suspicious in itself.
I've checked and there isn't anything wrong with the questions themselves, but however they are basic and the answers to them are simple.
I can't decide if this is enough to warrant a Stack Exchange employee to have a closer look into this, or if I should simply flag one of the downvoted questions explaining my suspicions. Of course, posting this question might help, but then again, it might not.
I read Who do I go to when I'm being stalked by a specific user?, but if I don't know/have proof that a specific user is doing it, or if I'm even being targeted, should I follow the same steps as a precaution?
We can only see larger patterns, though, and cannot see individual votes. Stack Exchange employees need to be called in to investigate and invalidate these votes, and their time is very limited. We tend to call them in only in the worst or most obvious cases.
I don't want to waste the valuable time of a Stack Exchange employee to investigate this if I can't be sure if I'm even being targeted.
Is it worth bringing this to a moderator or Stack Exchange employee?
Looks like it's still happening, and that the pattern has changed. Now in the morning & one of those was on a +14/-0 answer of mine which has nothing wrong. It seems that whoever's behind this is well-aware of this Meta post: