27

If I want to undo my votes on any question or answer, within how much time can I undo, from the time I voted?

Is there any specific time span within which I have to do that?

0

1 Answer 1

26

After you vote, your vote is locked in 5 minutes.

After those 5 minutes, you cannot undo or change your vote until a post is edited.

The purpose of vote lock-in is to prevent tactical downvoting. "Tactical downvoting" is when a user downvotes competing answers to make their own answer look better. It makes other answers look less good, and makes that user's own answer look a bit better compared to the others. This also causes the user's own answer to be higher in the list, which makes it more visible and increases its change of getting more votes.

Obviously this is not desirable; votes should be based on the value of an answer. Votes should not be cast to "win" a competition.

We have a -1 penalty for downvoting competing answers; but if you revert your vote, you get that 1 point back. By locking votes, the "tactical downvoter" has to do more work to get their reputation points back.

20
  • 3
    What is "tactical downvoting"?
    – NovaLogic
    Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:06
  • 8
    @NovaLogic "Tactical downvoting" is downvoting competing answers, with the intention of giving them a lower ranking compared to one's own answer. It makes one's own answer look better in comparison, and gets one's own answer ranked higher - thus more likely to attract more votes. We strongly discourage this practice, or course. Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:10
  • 5
    The real strategy against tactical down voting would be to prevent the answering person from down voting any other answers, if he had caste his vote before answering, the action of answering automatically remove the votes on other answers. Vote lock is only to prevent people from abusing vote reversal and driving some user crazy. Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:21
  • 7
    @AntoinePelletier Suppose you encountered a question that had genuinely bad answers. And you know a much better answer. Now you'd have to choose between (a) downvoting the bad answers, or (b) providing a good one. Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:26
  • 2
    But the restriction is meaningless, because you can edit the question or answer yourself and then change your vote. And besides, changing your mind is GOOD. It should not be discouraged. This entire rule is just silly and should be abolished. It serves no purpose.
    – matt
    Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:26
  • 2
    @matt If you are above 2000 points you can. I recall one case of a user who accidentally downvoted and made a trivial edit to correct it. But I'm not aware of large-scale abuse. If all answers on a post have trivial edits followed by vote reversals, that would be suspicious. ... I wouldn't be surprised if there was a script to detect that pattern. Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:28
  • It’s not abuse. I rethink my vote a LOT. I use the minimal edit and change vote technique a LOT. I have to, because the time limit is stupid.
    – matt
    Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:30
  • 6
    And I don’t believe the rule has anything to do with tactical down voting.
    – matt
    Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:32
  • 3
    If you rethink your votes a lot then perhaps you aren't voting for the right reasons. Sure sometimes you start to answer, do some research and realise the other persons answer was not as bad as it seemed. But this should be rare (and you should encourage that other user to add the reasoning - that you presumably both discovered - to their question) - I promise nothing here is meant condescendingly (I can't figure out how better to reword that first sentence) Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:35
  • @AntoinePelletier That would be a terrible method; it fails to address the real problem and shoves a certain behavior down users' throats. At SO we place a lot of value on user agency.
    – TylerH
    Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:36
  • @matt The rule is there because of tactical downvoting; Jeff Atwood himself pointed this out. Whether or not it's working as intended... that's open for debate. Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:37
  • 2
    @MMAdams the idea with tactical downvoting is that after your answer pulls ahead you could undownvote the other answers and get your rep back but your answer will still be perceived as best. If it's locked, you can't Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:41
  • 2
    @matt Good point. My best guess is that tactical downvoting of questions was something Jeff and Joel worried about when they created the site. IIRC downvoting questions once cost a point of rep too, many years ago. Nowadays there's hardly a point in tactically downvoting questions; new questions get pushed off the front page in just a few minutes anyway. Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 13:57
  • 1
    It does not make sens, look if i really want my answer to look better, then i would simply downvote other's answer, without reversal. And -2 for each answer downvoted would not hold me form doing it. The fact that you can actually vote in any way on competing answer IS the problem. It's like running for being president, but you are allowed to downvote one time on all your competitor. And as there is often not much votes... one vote is actually a lot. Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 14:26
  • 1
    @Justin Ha ! -1 is not THAT discouraging. If I was a rep farmer, I could not care less about -1 vs. my answer on top. I love SO a lot, but I can't stop thinking the vote system is flawed. Argue with me as much as you want, the only acceptable arguments are that it's going to be too tough to rethink it better... which is also NOT true Commented Apr 11, 2018 at 19:39

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .