Sometimes I see that someone has downvoted a question or an answer that I don't think deserved to be downvoted. I don't think it deserves to be upvoted either, yet I find myself tempted to upvote it just to "cancel out" the unwarranted (IMO) downvote.
Should we be discouraging this practice? If so, how might we do so and what might we encourage users to do instead?
UPDATE (in response to @Louis's comment) : Sure, but a voting metric is most meaningful when we can trust systemically that all instances of it are "saying" more or less the same thing: An upvote is supposed to say "this is a good answer". One that says "this is not a bad answer" is saying a different thing entirely. If both of these things are being said through the same metric, and if this is occurring on a wide-enough scale, the meaningfulness of that metric begins to degrade - our ability to understand what is being said through it (what it means) grows decreasingly clear.
I acknowledge that this is a hypothetical problem (because I assume relatively few users do it), and therefore that this is largely a theoretical discussion, but I think the basic idea and utility of not only Stack Overflow but Stack Exchange is predicated on the clarity and meaningfulness of these metrics, and therefore that its a worthwhile discussion to have.
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which you feel did not deserve a downvote. Would you still be tempted to make a "cancel out" vote if you viewed the vote count and saw there were 10 upvotes and 11 downvotes?