When I downvote an answer, I lose 1 reputation point. But downvoting a question is free.
Is there any particular reason for that?
When I downvote an answer, I lose 1 reputation point. But downvoting a question is free.
Is there any particular reason for that?
Downvotes are an integral part of the automated system that evaluates question quality and blocks user accounts that can't formulate coherent questions.
People weren't downvoting questions because it was costing them reputation, so we removed the rep cost for questions. Evaluating questions costs people time; there really shouldn't be any more cost than that to voice your disapproval for an ill-conceived question.
Answers are different. When I'm posting an answer to a question, I am competing with other answerers for the precious reputations, so there should be a cost for me to downvote their answers.
-1
is nothing but a psychological effect.
The reasoning for this difference has been laid out in Stack Exchange blog as follows:
...we’re determined to keep question quality high, even at the cost of refusing a little sand. It’s true that you can’t have Q&A without questions, but having the wrong sorts of questions is far more dangerous. The fastest way to kill any Q&A site is to flood it with low-quality questions. I think Mark Trapp summed it up best in this meta answer:
To put it another way, when I go to a Stack Exchange home page, I see a list of questions. If most of those are terrible questions with little to no indication that I’d be wasting my time by reading them, the value proposition of visiting and participating is diminished: I have better things to do.
Compare that to answers on a specific question: I’ve made a conscious choice to look into what I think is an interesting question. I already made the decision that the question is worth my time. If I find the answers to be useless, I have a few different options, as an interested party, to register my displeasure, including writing my own answer. Being able to write your own answer is key: if your answer is good enough, it’ll rise above the junk answers and everyone will be better off for it.
There is no such action for question lists. I can’t say “these questions suck, show me this question I just thought up instead”: that’d be silly. So, it’s imperative the question list have a high signal-to-noise ratio, and removing the penalty for those users who do take the time to read a question and later find it to be useless so they can down-vote is conducive to that.
Fundamentally, answers can be filtered in ways that questions cannot...