First time asker here.
There is a question on Stack Overflow that has a bounty for 400 reputation points. I have answered the question after user Leyenda. Leyenda's answer is actually false (it does not work the way he/she suggests) and if you follow the detailed example I provide in my answer you will notice that Leyenda's answer does not work(something confirmed by another user), she/he was very close to the correct answer however. In any case it got upvoted twice.
I am not asking for votes. I am very curious however, as OData security is a topic that I am very much interested in, what can one do in such case to protect the correct answer? Flagging is not (to my understanding) the right tool: Leyenda's answer was not spammy or something. Just wrong. Downvoting only goes half the way. People browsing through quickly and not bothering to check should not be voting on answers (I am assuming the two upvotes were due to this).
I just want to stress that I mean no offence to anyone (especially not Leyenda who, as I mentioned in my answer, was close to the correct solution) and, honestly, I have been guilty of not being very careful in the past. I am just asking for ways to handle such situations, and maybe provoke some discussion on fast upvoting and downvoting.
I know that accepted answers are not always the most upvoted ones. This is a good thing in my opinion; the community gets to pick the right one from the bunch. This situation however is different as the community picked an obviously (anyone who actually checks will see) wrong answer.
I did comment on the wrong answer and the other user that later confirmed mine also commented, and the OP did not fix his answer. The issue was that even when I downvoted, the two answers had equal votes. I think the problem is that there is no way to confirm that someone that up-votes or down-votes really knows what he\she is doing. MAYBE, perhaps, the reputation required to vote up or down should be increased or a user should be able to vote up or down only after he\she answered at least an X amount of votes.
I know that accepted answers are not always the most upvoted ones. This is a good thing in my opinion; the community gets to pick the right one from the bunch.
Why do you assume that the community is going to pick the right answer? It's entirely possible that the correct answer is exactly the one that is the least popular by the community.