Here's a first-time question-asker at -11, fifteen minutes after he asked the question.
Okay. And? A question is a question is a question. Who asked it is basically irrelevant to the judgement of it's quality.
I know as well as anybody that he probably wouldn't improve the question into anything reasonably answerable, even if it weren't closed as a duplicate of "what's a debugger and why do you think I should have been born knowing how to use one".
True. But...votes don't occur on what might happen. Votes are on what the post is right now. Chances are just as good that someone posting that exact question would have gotten just as many downvotes. And with good reason.
However, he hasn't had the chance to disappoint anybody yet, the odds really aren't improved by this kind of reception.
It's not about giving someone the chance to disappoint anyone. It's about judging the post as it currently is. Not who posted it. Not what it might become.
And an awful lot of people here never come back later to reassess their votes.
That's also true. Pretty much by design; the thinking is that the long tail will eventually result in the post hitting it's true level of quality. There's just too many posts to have time to go back to older ones and reassess. It's unreasonable to expect voters to have to revisit the posts they've already seen. It'd be nice, and some do, but it's as expected as downvoting in the first place; that is, all at the volunteer's behest.
Has anybody suggested that we block downvoting on first-time questions until the user has been back to engage with requests for improvements? If they're recalcitrant or hopeless then, by all means get out the pitchforks.
Yes. Ad nauseum. It never works. We vote on post quality, not who posted it. All it does is delay the inevitable, when users are introduced to, "real SO", only now it's a massive whiplash, as their first post was just fine. No downvotes, after all.
MO, closing questions is not like voting. Coming back to find "your answer can already be found over there", or "we can't answer that" is not like coming back to a pile of downvotes. Personally, I suspect most people are going to interpret downvotes as a contentless internet "f*** you" instead of "this question is of poor quality because...". But I don't have any data to back that up.
Yeah...it is the perception. I get it. You get it. We all get it. The system sucks at explaining it. And it should do better. But that's the thing; the system has to do that. The way it's designed right now, it's meant to be a cold, unemotional judgement. And I want it to stay that way, to be honest. But I can see how converting that judgement into something the poster can translate as less (or not at all) hostile would be beneficial. How to do that, I don't know, but I challenge the assertion that we are required to invest more effort into a post than the poster themselves.
I think that's actually more hostile than any number of downvotes.
From your comment:
"So when we surround them yelling 'f*** you', just tell them they're perceiving it the wrong way".
That's not what I perceive. There's orders of magnitude more new users than curators. I see them as janitors, or floodworkers, desperately trying to stem the tide of junk. It's been a losing battle for years; until the system changes, it's going to continue being one. It's not an, "us vs. them" dichotomy; it's one about the struggle between quality and...not. Users can contribute both, and we'd really like it if everyone contributed quality posts.