12

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.

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  • 34
    Eh. The other side is that these comments can draw out useful explanations from downvoters who'd otherwise have moved on silently; I've left them occasionally myself with success. I wouldn't block them from being posted outright, although by their nature they're obsolete the next day and should be deleted or flagged. (Naturally, the usefulness depends heavily on its tone; the same notional question may be read as "I don't understand; please provide me with an explanation?" or as "who dared downvote my answer? I will smash them!" depending upon word choice, and the latter isn't useful.)
    – Mark Amery
    Jul 22, 2018 at 20:32
  • 4
    Very related: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/366421/1233251
    – E_net4
    Jul 22, 2018 at 20:36
  • 5
    Why not simply flag the comment as "no longer needed" since it in fact not needed Jul 22, 2018 at 21:04
  • 2
    I just ignore them, no special reply/action/ban required. Such comments are a invitation to a free mugging, and I'd rather stay out of hospital. Jul 22, 2018 at 21:10
  • 5
    @vol7ron well, that would be nice, woudn't it? Sadly, given the very poor record of users improving bad questions after constructive comments, and the even poorer record of responding with abuse, there is next-to-no incentive for curators to attempt to explain downvotes. If OP's wish, they can read the rules/policy/advice that is freely available and work out for themselves why they were downvoted. It would be good if they could show some diligence and read that advice before asking questions instead of asking for street-fights afterwards:( Jul 22, 2018 at 23:50
  • 8
    Non-voter, why did you not vote??? Whats wrong with my question?? If I find you I'm going to go thru every single one of your questions and not vote on them!
    – JK.
    Jul 23, 2018 at 0:45
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    @JK could you please stop with the serial non-voting? Or at least explain yourself on each of my posts you see? Having to flag your (lack of) actions daily is getting tiresome!
    – Patrice
    Jul 23, 2018 at 1:32
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    'I still don’t think it explains the good posts that are just randomly downvoted' - examples/evidence, please! You see, the thing is, that the 'random downvote' claim is made very frequently and, just as often, the claimants are asked for evidence to back up that slur against SO curators. So far the number of examples linked, over years, is zero. Jul 23, 2018 at 8:15
  • 3
    @vol7ron if you want to see some evidence of unacceptable behaviour, you should take note of the huge numbers of accounts that get removed for sock-puppeting, ring-voting etc. There is a LOT more evidence for that than 'emotional downvotes'. Jul 23, 2018 at 8:27
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    @user8371915 FWIW I've been campaigning publicly and working behind the scenes to help with the sites comments, as they seem to be a big source of friction and flagging. So I'm trying to oil the wheels. This is the latest public effort meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/371410/…
    – user3956566
    Jul 23, 2018 at 11:57
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    @vol7ron How is voting a short term solution? Do votes expire? If so, that's news to me. Yes, improving an answer from a bad answer to a good one is great. Sadly, it pretty rarely happens for answers with significant problems. Often because it's not possible, sometimes because it's just too hard for the author to do. Sure, sometimes voting isn't reliable because people like you refuse to actually cast your vote based on the quality of the post. That's not a reason to encourage people to vote worse, it just makes voting accurately all the more important.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2018 at 13:53
  • 3
    @vol7ron Sure it does. Lots of people correct problematic posts as a results of downvotes that they get. That said, that's a secondary goal of the votes, not their primary goal. The primary goal is to ensure that readers are given information on the quality of the posts. That's valuable. That you're refusing to provide that very useful information is a problem. I'm not speculating on your voting, you're telling us how you vote, and I'm telling you the major problems with the behavior you're advocating should be used.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2018 at 14:04
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    @vol7ron And I've seen lots of cases of people complaining about getting downvotes and starting fights and wasting tons of people's time and resulting in no improvements to the answer. A single anecdote that it works doesn't make the practice useful. You advocated that people not downvote bad posts. If that's not how you vote, then my points still stand. You're advocating that harmful behavior. If you don't do it yourself that doesn't make the advice any less harmful.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2018 at 14:13
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    @vol7ron If you want to propose that comments be mandatory with downvotes, feel free to do so. Note that it's been a rejected suggestion many thousands of times because there is just so much compelling evidence that it would be harmful. You're free to do the research yourself if you want to learn more about why it's a bad idea. It's not pessimistic to consider very compelling and overwhelming evidence that a given course of action is harmful. Ignoring all of that evidence and advocating it anyway, because it works 1% of the time, doesn't lead to improvements.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2018 at 14:27
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    @vol7ron If you think you have an entirely new idea for how to force people to comment when voting that hasn't already been discussed and that addressed the criticisms of all of the other proposals, then feel free to make such a proposal. Given how many have failed, I don't like your chances. Just make sure you do your research, because there have been a lot of different proposals, and there are lots of different problems for you address if you want to make another.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2018 at 14:46

3 Answers 3

15

No, definitely not.

You have some valid points, but I get the impression that they are pretty speculative (which you also admit to some extent) and I have not seen the same picture as you at all. I do not claim my view to be 100% true and good, but I really do not see the same problems you see. I can at most admit that there are potential problems, but not actual problems.

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.

Well, I admit some truth to this, but I cannot see how that justifies a ban. It's important that it is allowed to ask. After all, you're not forced to answer anyway.

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 have asked this several times, both on my post and others, and I have often received useful answers. Sometimes from the downvoter and sometimes from others. It has often helped me improve my posts.

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.

I have no idea how uncomfortable it makes other users. I can only answer for myself here, and I have no problem whatsoever to answer "I did not downvote, but I think it is because of < reason >".

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.

Occasionally I've seen these discussions become somewhat hectic, but that's ok. It is very rarely I would describe it as "out of control".

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    Why did you downvote? :D
    – klutt
    Jul 23, 2018 at 17:24
9

No, don't do this. There are two reasons:

  1. They often help questioners / answerers to improve content. The focus shouldn't be on internet points(*), it should be on improving content. Some people instinctively delete their negative-scoring posts. Others, like me, religiously don't unless they can see, or are made to see, something materially wrong with their answer. I have often improved, and sometimes deleted, posts based on specific feedback from voters.
  2. They clarify usefulness of poor-scoring accepted answers. Accepted answers get pinned at the top. On several occasions, my negatively scoring post has been accepted(**). This only serves to confuse the community and the wider audience (visitors from Google)... What? The answer is pinned at the top and has got a green tick. But it's got a negative score. What does that mean? Commenting on such answers helps the wider community and improves SO as a Q&A resource.

(*) Some increased possibility of retaliation votes.

(**) Some examples: 1, 2, 3, 4.

2
  • I feel like you are addressing a different question here. I don't doubt that comments on votes can be useful in general. I just don't think that the comments should be extorted this way, and the language which is usually used, has further implications. Jul 23, 2018 at 18:32
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    @user8371915, I take your point. But, as many would say, if you don't ask you don't get. I often ask for feedback on negative voting on my answers, and perhaps 50% of the time get a productive response. Don't have official stats, and it's only one person, but it's my experience.
    – jpp
    Jul 23, 2018 at 18:33
6

they are at least passive-aggressive

Sometimes, but not always. Here are two examples:

Questionable or malicious votes: I have questioned downvoting that was later deemed suspicious enough to be removed. The possibly-bot downvotes happened almost immediately after I asked the question and took attention from a fresh and valid question, and visitors could at least see a short discussion including someone else commenting that it was a reasonable question, giving them a reason to still consider using it or answering.

The user really doesn't know why their question is downvoted, and we want to help them become a better community member: We as a community have been talking about making SO welcoming to new users and not turning them off. Even if a user tries to follow guides, standards, and conventions, they may need help in the context of their specific question to fully understand. A discussion will allow them to overcome frustrations and edit the question without giving up. Helping people is half the reason we are here, therefore I think it is worth our time to encourage the community personally. The discussion can be as simple as paraphrasing or linking to guides, much like how a duplicate question flag automatically shows the potential duplicate to allow for contextual discussion.

Since there are valid reasons for discussing votes, we should mitigate their noise after each matter is settled by using the existing comment flagging tool for anything that is no longer helpful.

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    I have these 2 things exactly happening to me. I posted a question and about 30 secs later someone down-voted (the question was longer than your post, so no way they actually read it complete) and you have no clue what just happened. Another time I created a very complete question (in my opinion) and someone felt I was missing something or it was not clear and down-voted without comments, and only after I asked for clarification someone helped me realize what was wrong.
    – Dzyann
    Jul 23, 2018 at 19:49
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    @Dzyann The "in my opinion" part is incredibly important to desonctruct. It does not matter what one's opinion of their post is. It's the content that is evaluated here, and if said content is poorly researched, a downvote is the signal that needs to be applied to it. Unrelatingly, do not underestime the quickness at which an experimented user of a technology can scan a post to see id it contains key elements. I can recognize a lack of research in many questions which tags I'm proficient in in mere seconds, with very high accuracy. Jul 23, 2018 at 20:09
  • ... not to mention that generally, longer questions are mostly noise. Jul 23, 2018 at 20:10
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    @FélixGagnon-Grenier I agree with you, I have seen many of such questions. I would like to point out though that my comment is not a rant. I just have seen this happen for whatever reason and that is why I find value on being able to ask why did I get a down-vote. I research thoroughly, asking friends and colleagues and searching on internet, books, and whatever resource I can find, however I am not perfect and I am bound to ask something someone won't like or that someone else has asked before.
    – Dzyann
    Jul 23, 2018 at 23:25
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    @FélixGagnon-Grenier Also, being not native English speaker, sometimes I can be searching for a long time for something and I ask a friend from the US to search for the same and they find it in a second. They way I phrase things is obviously different, and for this and many other reasons of the like, and even for the very one you are pointing out, "opinion", the one down-voting in those 30 secs may very well be wrong on their down-vote, or they may be seeing something I don't so I find extremely helpful to be able in some way to ask "why?"
    – Dzyann
    Jul 23, 2018 at 23:27

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