"Progress is impossible without change and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything."
- George Bernard Shaw
Apologies in advance for the long post, but I am going to examine some aspects of both sides of the discussion. (1) The problems with vote lock-in. (2) The problems vote lock-in attempts to solve.
I'm sure many will disagree with me, but I'd appreciate full consideration of this post before casting your vote.
One problem with vote lock-in policy is that it is in direct conflict with the anonymous voting policy. (This is not intended to discuss the merits or otherwise of the anonymous voting policy. Just pointing out that these policies conflict with each other.)
Starting with the "legitimate" vote retraction cases:
- Post was up/down voted while bleary eyed and you realise you made a horrible mistake.
- Post was voted up/down at a time before you knew any better. You've learnt since then that your previous opinion/testing/belief was flawed.
- Post was voted up/down but changed within the 5 minute window that collapses the edit into the previous version. Meaning that for the purpose of retracting your vote "due to an edit", the post is considered not edited?!
In all of the above cases, in order to change your vote, the current "workaround" is that: you need to post a fake edit (if you can). It has been pointed out that it's more work. But the recording of the last edit means you might as well add the following paragraph to the bottom of the post.
Hello SO community. Contrary to anonymous voting principles, I must publicly declare: I realise I made a voting mistake in the past. Let it be known that:
- Whereas you did not previously even know if I had voted at all, you now can easily deduce what my previous vote was (as the one retracted not long after the edit).
- Furthermore, in the likely event that I cast a new vote in the opposite direction, you could similarly deduce whodunnit.
- Fortunately any compatriots who made a similar voting mistake on this post will be able to return in the months and years to come; and fix their errors in anonymity. For I have revealed myself in shameful humility to reap the antagonistic attentions of those I had hoped to avoid when I initially cast my anonymous vote.
(NOTE: If the above sounds absurd, that's the point. I consider vote lock-in to be utterly absurd!)
If you wish your votes to remain truly anonymous, you're unable to retract your vote (until the post happens to be edited): meaning that incorrect voting (_as in contrary to the voters current opinion_) remains locked in. This is exactly the opposite of any self-correcting system.
Of course "justifications" have been stated and some mooted for the lock-in rule. Hard evidence has even been suggested, though I've not seen any.
Possible reasons include to discourage tactical down-voting and prevent griefing. I'd also moot that it helps reduce a user jumping back and forth over privilege boundaries (though this is an issue in any case).
There's one thing that all these alleged problems have in common - they all involve 'large' numbers of retracted votes. In this case the simple non-invasive solution is to throttle the number of vote retractions instead of blocking them altogether.
Allowing only one retraction per day should resolve the alleged problems just as effectively as the current; which throws the baby out with the bath-water. However, even restricting vote retraction to 1 per 30 days might be enough to at least allow some of the incorrect votes to be fixed.
If I have managed to change anyone's mind on the matter, please fake edit Mason's post (even if the post has already been edited) to change your vote. :)