I'm a big fan of the Stack Exchange network and I visit it almost every day - mostly to ask questions on my own or every now and then to answer questions by others.
This Q&A way of communication is superb, but I'd like to address a question about the voting system. As we all now anybody with such privilege can upvote and/or downvote questions/answers written by others. Now, upvoting is kind of self explanatory: You like the question/answer/comment because it is constructive and useful for the community. As owner of your question/answer/comment you really don't need to know much about the reasons behind the upvote.
Downvoting on the other hand has some negative effects on the owner. Apart from loosing reputation it seems as a negative vote spurs others to vote negative - perhaps even more than upvoting spurs others to upvote. Now, as an owner of a question/answer/comment that receives negative votes it would be encouraging to know the reasons behind negative votes. Of course one could say that "if you really need to know there's always the flag option" but I believe users are more reluctant to flag something they are not sure about how to justify if they have an option to downvote it without justification.
At some point I've been a "victim" of it myself. I received downvotes on an answer that probably wasn't the best to begin with, but as I asked the community for the reasons of downvoting so I could learn from my mistakes, I never received any answer. It seems to me that downvoting could be used as a way to hide behind the anonymity that follows the voting system.
I would rather see a system where anyone who downvotes a post must leave a reason for it much like the flag system, but only visible for the owner of the post. To me Stack Exchange is about educating the community by the community and this suggestion could hopefully add to that principle.
What's your thoughts on that matter?