This question may be considered biased by some, but the problem I describe is an actual source of woe-and-worry for me, and one that's been bugging me for quite a long time; the problem is not specific to Stack Overflow, but it's mostly visible here.
There was a comment stating,
"Some people" are wrong and you know it
And, more importantly,
The only reason you didn't get any supportive voices is that the question you answered is borderline off-topic here (there are other SE sites for math questions) and is labeled with tags that few pay attention to. What I'm saying is, who cares?
... this made me think.
Imagine (actually, you don't have to imagine, because that's actually happening all the time on SO) that somebody posts a question that is either nontrivial because of its inherent difficulty or because of the little amount of documentation, support and userbase - and is, at the same time, concerning some kind of a "borderline" region (be that LISP programming, complex algorithmic problems or something similar).
Now, because of some luck (or appearing on the Hot list) the question actually gets some initial momentum (views) - and it receives some answers.
Since the problem is complicated or rare, most (if not all) of the initial answers are wrong. Some of the answers are purely wrong. Some are mediocre, but not entirely invalid, some are speculative. Most of them receive downvotes. Some posters delete their answers, while some remains.
Since the problem is complicated, the amount of daily views drops after the first short period.
Some people try to piece the information that's out there and create some valid answer.
Again, most of them are wrong, since the problem is, one way or another, complicated. This time, however, the initial fun-factor of the question has long since expired - nobody bothers with it anymore. The question gets little to no views, and the wrong answers get no votes.
Incidentally, somebody posts an answer a bit more valid than the others. It, too, gets essentially no votes, for the very same reason.
After a while, the storm erupts; two or more of the authors of the wrong answers begin convincing each other they were, in fact, right, and begin upvoting their answers, downvoting other answers etc.
They are given rational arguments why they are/may be wrong - but, for some unknown reason people don't actually vote on the answers. Maybe they aren't sure the answers are wrong; maybe they appreciate the answers' effort, even if the result is sub-par. Maybe something else, I don't know.
They are given solid reference(s), there are even parallel questions asked to provide them with the community's opinion; they either ignore it, call it biased, say this is your opinion, I'm entitled to mine (when dealing with factual information) etc.
The main questions are:
Should I "fight" with such questions?
If so, how? They aren't receiving attention, little people care about them, those who care at all don't want to get caught in the crossfire...
If not, doesn't that affect Stack Exchange's informational quality? After all, we have a wrong answer, upvoted seemingly valid. Anybody seeking an answer to this problem and considering Stack Overflow a reliable source would suffer.
I've read that,
IMHO, downvotes should be used for answers that are downright wrong, not just because they could be more complete or clearer. Use upvotes for the best answers and leave the ones in the middle alone.
Is that really the case?
Also, note that this is a direct example where community consensus means no consensus, because there is, essentially, almost no community caring about something enough.
Slightly related; this, and this one, sigh, is probably more related to why I do have this problem, instead of the problem itself.
For the sake of all parties involved, let's say the situation was imaginary and in no way related to my actual experience in the last 30 days.
for the sake of all parties involved
I'd prefer to not point out to a specific example of such question, on the grounds I was one of the parties involved and thus may be considered biased or trying to make a point for that one particular case; I consider the problem broader than that one case, as I've seen similar things happening a dozen of times in the past.