I mean different variants of
Why the downvote?
Justification:
- Even in the most neutral form (like the one above) they are at least passive-aggressive, and often go straight to the rude and abusive side.
- If voter made a conscious decision to avoid explanation an attempt to force the comment doesn't feel right. Additionally it is likely that the voter will never go back to the post.
- I don't have hard data to support that, but I often get an impression that comments like this make other users uncomfortable, and result in all kinds of "it is not my vote" responses.
- Discussions about votes can easily get out of control - it is not easy to explain why post is not useful, and be truly "welcoming" at the same time.
Overall justification requests are (disputably) not constructive and likely to escalate. This is particularly important in the light of new CoC and overall "welcoming" discussion which seems to strongly promote "if you're in doubt, don't". Voters should not be pressured to respond, especially when there is a high probability of misunderstanding.
Edit:
Responding to the comment by Hovercraft Full Of Eels
Why not simply flag the comment as "no longer needed" since it in fact not needed
This is certainly an option, but doesn't fully address the problems mentioned above. It might however if there was fast track removal path, similar to the one for "thank you" comments.
Another edit
The question I want to raise here is not if why-the-downvote comments are constructive, but if they should be accepted in the context of the emerging CoC and overall "welcoming" discussion.
There are two points which are particularly important in my opinion:
Why-the-downvote comments are usually (that's subjective, so I look forward to community feedback) not welcoming, especially when we tend focus on "Unwelcoming language" and not intent (Feedback on the Comment Classifier blog post).
Subjectively (once again community feedback is welcomed) they affect both voters and passersby.
Why-the-downvote comments are an attempt to coerce voters into behavior which goes strictly against their own best interest. Considering only on-site mechanics voter is always better-off by not commenting on a vote:
- Voter comments, user accepts the explanation and fixes or deletes the post if it cannot be fixed (0 on site, overall satisfaction).
- Voter comments, user doesn't respond (0 on site, 0 outside site).
- Voter comments, user starts rude or offensive comments (0, -1 outside site if voter cares about being called names by a stranger).
- Voter comments, user starts revenge voting (-1 on site, -1 outside side if voter cares about internet points).
- Voter comments, comment is marked as not welcoming enough (-1 on site, -1 outside side). It's been pointed out in With a userbase as diverse as Stack Overflow's, how will we arrive at an actionable definition of "unwelcoming"? that finding "actionable definition" of welcoming is hard in such diverse community, and to be honest I am not eager to check if my limited English skills and unfamiliarity with US culture can survive the welcomes test.
- Voter doesn't comment (0 on site, ? outside site).
To summarize, if I comment I can only get worse and never better, than when I don't comment.
Yet another edit
Seeing a heated discussion in the comments I think it important to point out that assumption that comments-on-votes are useful and should encouraged doesn't imply that why-the-downvote comments are as well.
I strongly suspect (this could an interesting survey question) that comments requesting vote explanations have actually an opposite effect. Based on my personal experience is it actually a good warning sign of troubles waiting ahead, I tend to avoid taking a part in the discussion, regardless of my actual status (being original voter or not).
So unless there is a strong empirical evidence suggesting that explanation requests actually prompt the explanations (or otherwise), we shouldn't use it as an argument pro or against why-the-downvote comments.