Upvoting and downvoting your colleagues' posts should be OK according to the rules, as long as you're upvoting the post and not the person.
As mentioned in this answer, the standard message for targeted voting includes the following (emphasis mine):
We recently noticed a substantial number of votes on your account to or from specific users. While we encourage everyone to upvote great posts, the motivation for doing so needs to be anchored in the merits of the post, not the person who wrote it. This is just a reminder to please refrain from targeting specific users when voting.
Stack Exchange works by ensuring that the best information rises to the top. Voting specifically for content that benefits your friends, family or colleagues unfairly skews that system, and continuing to do so can result in a lengthy suspension for all involved.
The system has processes in place to detect various types of voting between groups of users, so if you know anyone who may be voting for your stuff in kind, please ask them to refrain before the system detects such activity and takes similar actions on their account.
This is often just a simple misunderstanding, so no harm done. But continued activity of this sort can result in a prolonged suspension for all involved, so please let me know if you have any questions regarding this policy.
I have been on the receiving end of that message because I and my colleagues were watching and answering the same set of tags (what could now be considered a collective), and we upvoted the best answers following Stack Overflow's rules, which (surprise!) were given by employees of the company.
We implemented an ad-hoc solution to avoid situations like this one in the future (the "continued activity of this sort can result in a prolonged suspension" part was quite scary) that involves a browser extension that blocks us from upvoting our colleagues.
This is a bad solution for the community since lots of good answers have no upvotes due to not being able to upvote the best answer to a question (because they're written by a colleague). This is leaving questions as "unanswered" (no upvoted or accepted answers), despite having a good answer.
I know that a good answer will eventually get upvoted by the community, but some good questions have a very small amount of views (despite having good answers), and this reduces the chances of the answers receiving upvotes from the community.
With the creation of collectives, it seems like a good opportunity to allow upvotes from colleagues again, but removing any reputation that could be given between employees of the same collective. This would disincentivize any reputation abuse through upvotes, and only foment good answers to be upvoted by the employees of the collective.
This would also solve some additional problems like approving edits from colleagues (I don't know if it is an issue, but there's some reputation change involved in getting your edits approved).
TL;DR:
Stack Overflows' rules discourage you from influencing colleagues' reputation. Removing reputation changes caused by employees inside collectives could encourage you to upvote good answers from your colleagues without the fear of impacting your colleague's reputation (and being banned for that reason).
you aren't the only ones voting
. If we try to check all un-answered questions (which gives more value to the community than looking at already answered questions), we'll find those low-view questions with just an answer from one of our colleagues. If I upvote that good answer, then due to the low view count of that question my upvote will be the only one on my colleague's answer, and this might have caused an issue with the automated warning system. This does not mean the answer was bad, or the upvote was illegitimate.