46

I'm feeling like I'm going to draw lots of fire with this question, but this is bugging me for long time now, so I feel like I need get it out.

So the main question/request here: I think we should change the minimum requirements in order to cast an upvote.

Why? Because I truly believe that SO is aiming to be a database for the best possible programming solutions and the only metric for a quality of an answer is upvotes/downvotes ratio. But do those upvotes/downvotes have any meaning if they are being cast by just some random people? It seems that all the SE sites think not, otherwise any user could upvote/downvote.

So to the point — I'm seeing way too many very low quality answers with way too many upvotes (I won't post examples because I don't want to create any Meta effects — if people feeling the same — they will understand what I'm talking about) and thus creating a very low/misleading content on the first page of practically any Google search result.

The reason for that (I believe) is because the minimum requirement for an upvote is only 15(!) rep, which you can easily achieve with some random edits that in no way indicate the level of your skill.

So what I propose I think that a minimum upvote/downvote rep should behave the same as tag scores, e.g., not by some general rep (from edits/questions/bounties/accepted answers), but by the amount of upvotes you have earned by answering questions — that means that, for example, in order to upvote/downvote you should get at least 15 upvotes on answers.

I don't think this is a very high requirement, but I think it is necessary in order to improve the quality of this site.

What do you think?


Edit: This question wasn't intended to hurt anyone in particular and thus I haven't added links with examples, so I'd appreciate that people will refrain from massive down voting my main account

Thank you

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  • 100
    While I sympathize on the thoughts behind this suggested change, I would like to draw your attention to a possible degradation of SO users' motivation to answer "noobie" questions since the OP will not be able to upvote a good answer. This applies to rather uncommon topics even more so.
    – connexo
    Jul 22, 2015 at 11:43
  • 19
    Related: Bad questions gaining fast (<5 min) upvotes. Especially when it's a homework question (not the good kind), where I suspect the upvotes come from class mates who'd also really really want that Easiest Solution.
    – Jongware
    Jul 22, 2015 at 11:44
  • 28
    @connexo OP wouldn't be able to upvote but could still accept the answer, which is motivation enough to answer a question, no ? Jul 22, 2015 at 11:45
  • 27
    If I'm understanding correctly, you want to bump voting privileges from 15 and 125 (up/down) to 150 rep, correct? If so, that changes the number of users that can up vote from over 1M to less than 300K
    – Andy Mod
    Jul 22, 2015 at 11:46
  • 23
    @TZHX: No, that seems daft - being downvoted is a sign of lack of quality, whereas being upvoted is (or should be) a sign of positive quality. Restricting downvotes to those who have been upvoted X times would make more sense.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jul 22, 2015 at 11:46
  • 10
    Meh - I hardly ever upvote anything these days:( Jul 22, 2015 at 11:47
  • 22
    @MartinJames that's my point exactly. it seems like only low rep users upvote, while all the high rep users just gave up on the whole system. Jul 22, 2015 at 11:49
  • 10
    @connexo I do think it will have a positive effect, "noobie" question being usually duplicates, this could limit rep whoring on their question. and if the question is interesting enough, someone will answer, and if the answer is good enough, peers with vote right will upvote it. So it could end up with an amelioration of overall quality instead of a degradation (unless you see SO as a help center and not a quality aimed Q/A base)
    – Tensibai
    Jul 22, 2015 at 11:49
  • 10
    @TZHX: So what was the point of it? Basically it looked like you were trying to claim that a reasonable suggestion was equivalent to a blatantly unreasonable one...
    – Jon Skeet
    Jul 22, 2015 at 11:53
  • 10
    @Tensibai I'm inclined to think the suggested mechanism would indeed increase the quality of answers. No incentives to "spam" low quality answers to low quality questions (because users would know they won't get upvotes by high rep users if they don't post quality answers). Jul 22, 2015 at 11:54
  • 13
    Answer questions to help others. Sometimes you won't get the upvotes you deserve, sometimes you'll get more.. keep on answering for the "higher purpose" of helping and it will end up improving the community. The current mechanism is, in my opinion, flawed because it's fueling the "get more upvote then you deserve" for low quality answers, so it discourages high rep users for answering has they sometimes get less upvotes than low quality answers simply because "noobie" can't appreciate the quality of their contributions. Jul 22, 2015 at 12:13
  • 14
    there is somewhat related, interesting idea to get rid of first day voting, "...wanna vote? stick with us! (for at least a day or two)"
    – gnat
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:26
  • 19
    I've seen, on more than one occasion, the entire front page +1'd all the way, just because some idiot wanted a badge and decided to shotgun upvote everything. I've seen, far too many times, extremely low-quality questions upvoted for no obvious reason. In both scenarios, I'd venture a guess that it's new, low-rep users doing this. I've got no proof, but I'd hope (as misguided as that probably is) that seasoned users wouldn't be doing this. You've got my upvote. Jul 22, 2015 at 12:32
  • 9
    Answers on questions that are very very easy to answer and are obviously noob questions get the most upvotes, that's a sad fact...
    – baao
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:17
  • 9
    It took me a year and a half to be able to comment on posts, so in that time, I'd post an answer that should have been a comment, only to have it flagged as 'should have been a comment.' It's incredibly prohibitive to get enough rep to be an active member of any community, and this would likely serve to make it even more prohibitive.
    – KymikoLoco
    Jul 22, 2015 at 16:39

12 Answers 12

148

I have to disagree. My impression of the voting system is that it is designed to increase engagement with the site, even by very casual users. It's part of what distinguishes Stack Overflow (and Stack Exchange as a whole) from a web forum.

Somewhat autobiographically, I think of it is this way: I'm mainly active on three Stack Exchange sites (Stack Overflow, AcademiaSE, and OpenData). But, I also sometimes visit English Language & Usage, TeX - LaTeX, and Cross Validated when I have questions about something. The fact that I can up-vote on those sites even though I hardly ever ask or answer anything on them makes my experience of those other sites more enjoyable and engaging. For the user of another Stack Exchange site that happens across an Stack Overflow Q&A or just a very casual user who has an Stack Exchange account, but doesn't participate much on any site, their ability to express opinions on questions and answers is an integral part of the larger gamification scheme that is Stack Exchange.

Simply because someone has low rep doesn't mean they aren't knowledgeable or, more importantly, that they aren't able to correctly express when an answer was or was not helpful to them.

I agree that there might be useful tweaks to the voting system (e.g., earning variable numbers of points from users with different reputations; modifying the incentive structure to encourage voting by high-rep users [beyond the Civic Duty and Electorate badges]). But, I also think keeping the voting threshold low is important for the broader experience of the site.

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  • 22
    I can agree to some extent but saying "Simply because someone has low rep doesn't mean they aren't knowledgeable or, more importantly, that they aren't able to correctly express when an answer was or was not helpful to them." is like saying "simply because someone doesn't have a MD doesn't mean he can't be a Doctor". That statement could be potentially true, but will you agree to be operated by a school boy? I don't think so. We usually don't take such chances in real life in any aspect, rather we expect that if someone has some skill he needs to prove it first in order for us to trust him Jul 22, 2015 at 12:51
  • 35
    @DavidArenburg Fair enough, but it's just as easy to have a counter-example. If Tim Berners-Lee wants to swing by StackOverflow occasionally and cast some votes but only ever asks that one question, I'd be perfectly fine with that.
    – Thomas
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:55
  • 8
    If Tim would want to truly participate in SO voting system, he could easily answer some simple question or two, get some upvotes and here you go. The privilege to express your opinion on such a site content (IMO), should be restricted by some minimal effort on a user's side. Otherwise, how would you even know that it is truly him? Jul 22, 2015 at 13:02
  • 3
    Well, so to keep some part-time passer by happy, we should support the upvotes from full-time present learners upvoting anything "cool" ?
    – Tensibai
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:04
  • 7
    @DavidArenburg "will you agree to be operated by a school boy" ? No, but I might agree to be operated by a doctor that his older brother (with at least 15 rep) recommended. That's a better analogy for voting.
    – ryanyuyu
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:47
  • 5
    But you automatically earn 100 for joining other sites. This is significantly higher than the 15 needed to upvote. Jul 22, 2015 at 15:13
  • @MichaelChirico it's not about rep rather upvotes on provided answer. Jul 22, 2015 at 15:56
  • 14
    @DavidArenburg Having an operation performed on you is hardly as serious as who you allow to subjectively judge the value of posts on a QA site. Jul 22, 2015 at 16:37
  • 6
    @DavidArenburg Yes but I'm highlighting just how different they are because I don't think the voting is as big an issue as you do at all. Is the signal noise actively interrupting you finding answers or does it bother you because the system doesn't work as well as it could/should? Jul 22, 2015 at 16:41
  • 3
    @David, if the answers given is crappy, then shouldn't the comment section be used to generate more discussions on why it's a bad answer? this would generate more positive feedback and engagement. Everyone should have a voice. - the newbies can learn from the noob questions, while the experienced one can tackle the challenging questions.
    – Angel Koh
    Jul 22, 2015 at 17:28
  • 2
    @AngelKoh i'm using the comment section a lot, but you can't retract 6 upvotes that happened within the first 5 minutes even if the OP ignores you. Many times the comment stops the mad upvote stream, but usually people don't want to downvote because it will cost them their rep. Neither they will edit the answer in order to retract their vote because they afraid of revenge. There are also many old answers that no one even look at your comment, but that another issue I guess. Jul 22, 2015 at 17:31
  • 2
    @David, it's anecdotal, but i do look at all comments when i'm searching for an answer on SO (I don't want to implement a wrong solution that'll come back to bite me later). If the answer solve my problem, I'd give them an upvote.
    – Angel Koh
    Jul 22, 2015 at 17:40
  • 12
    Another possibility is a more gradual increase in upvoting rights: 1 upvote per day with 15 rep, 5 per day by 100 rep, 10 by 250, from 500 as it is now (or something like that). New users get voting rights quite early and get rewarded with additional voting rights when they gain rep, thus also addressing the engagement point @Thomas mentioned.
    – Jaap
    Jul 22, 2015 at 19:21
  • 3
    "Designed to increase engagement" in a "facebook-style-no-negative-feedback" way, yeah... just incessant, mindless, like, like, like, like, like... because I only have a like button.
    – canon
    Jul 23, 2015 at 1:18
  • 3
    I have to agree with @Thomas. Some of us are just new to the party, and that doesn't reflect our knowledge or ability to determine the usefulness of an answer, or the appropriateness of a question. I only got involved a few weeks ago because I had some challenges in Python, and every time I Googled, I invariably found the answer on SO. So I got involved. I have decades of experience with computers, programming, and Excel, and have tried to provide helpful answers where I can. It is just that for the past few years that wasn't my main focus, so I missed the groundswell of SO's beginnings.
    – AMR
    Jul 24, 2015 at 21:51
99

I don't think this is a very high requirement

I emphatically disagree. 15 upvotes are the equivalent of 150 reputation. That's non-trivial for new users. More importantly, you are making it harder for users to even get those first 15 upvotes in the first place. If it takes 15 upvotes for one user to vote, each of those 15 upvoters also need 15 upvotes and.... Basically new users would not be able to vote for a very long time. And once they did, I think they'd be more tempted to vote incorrectly. They might drop "pity" vote more often to help other new users. Which is exactly what you're trying to avoid: voting for non-quality reasons.

As for restricting the upvote privilege

by the amount of upvotes you have earned by answering questions

Even if your proposed limit were something like 2 upvotes on answers (the equivalent of 20 rep), the restriction of getting the reputation from posts is unnecessary. You don't need to be able to create posts of your own in order to judge the usefulness and clarity of other posts. Upvotes don't exist solely for "technical accuracy" (although that's a very important consideration). Other things like formatting, ease of understanding the explanation, and grammar are important factors of post quality. And most users can accurately judge posts on these merits. After all, the most amazingly comprehensive answer to a problem is not useful if no one can understand it.

I don't like the idea of further crippling new users to that extent. Raising the voting requirements would certainly create more lurkers and fewer answerers. I mean what's the point of having an account if you can't even do anything with it? Most of my questions have already been asked, and I can't even upvote the helpful answers? And no one else can upvote my stuff because they also don't have the privilege. People vote because it's an important part of contributing to the community. Making it that much harder to vote would turn off a lot of new users.

I also believe some of the problems you point out aren't symptoms of the low rep requirement to upvote. Instead, they are problems that are inherent in people not understanding the culture of SO (and not bothering to learn). How many NAAs have you seen where users say "I can't comment yet, so please don't downvote [insert comment]"? Raising the upvote requirement might lead to even more VLQ posts that fit the "Please don't add Thanks as an answer" pattern.

And as for

But are those upvotes/downvotes have any meaning if they are being cast by just some random people? It seems that all the SE sites think not, otherwise any user could upvote/downvote.

This is fallacious. Of course voting should be user-independent as long as the voting itself is not random. How many users do you think vote randomly (and not actually because their standards for "helpful" and "clear" are different)? The minimum requirements are efforts to prevent spammers and voting fraud.


TL;DR

I think this would create more problems than it would solve because it is too strict of a requirement.

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  • Being able to convey programming ideas as well written answers is hard. I think a lot of more experienced uses forget that.
    – yizzlez
    Jul 22, 2015 at 14:50
  • 1
    It is very easy to get upvotes on answers for any user who knows their stuff. I saw many many such users who meteorically gained rep in no time. I have such user on my tag who has already over 80K rep within one year since registration. If a user finds it hard to get upvotes it means he still has much to learn and thus his judgment regarding if some answer is good or not still needs some enhancement- and it's totally fine. When I just registered I found it very hard to get upvotes simply because I didn't know my stuff. Regarding 15 upvotes, we can make it 10 - that's not the point here. Jul 22, 2015 at 16:04
  • 22
    @DavidArenburg "If a user finds it hard to get upvotes it means he still has much to learn and thus his judgment regarding if some answer is good or not still needs some enhancement" Wrong! People can appreciate quality work long before they can replicate it. Otherwise professional artists, athletes, writers would not have audiences. Likewise, people can easily judge whether a post is useful and clear even if they could not have created it by themselves.
    – ryanyuyu
    Jul 22, 2015 at 16:19
  • So that's the whole point I'm trying to make. In programming this isn't how it works. A new user that receives a working code don't know how this code works. He doesn't know if it memory efficient, if their is a much simpler and fast solution, He doesn't know if this code breaks something else in his code. I've seen way too many bad accepted answers (even heavily downvoted ones just because neither the OP or the answerer can't even tell what's wrong in the answer). Many times when I'm trying to explain the flaw/error in the answer, no one listens simply because they can't understnad me. Jul 22, 2015 at 16:24
  • 10
    @DavidArenburg wrong again. Upvotes aren't the end-all-be-all indicator of just the "programming" correctness of a solution. Rather they also indicate how "clear" (aka easy to understand) a post is. And really good answers will include the reasons why this code is efficient (or not). Besides, that's what the rest of the community is for. A single user only has one vote.
    – ryanyuyu
    Jul 22, 2015 at 16:29
  • I like it how you think that your opinion is the absolute right. I'm not wrong, I just think otherwise. Either way, as I said before, I don't think that a very novice programmer can judge correctly if a code is good or not (I saw too many of these misjudgments), though with time spent on SO anyone can learn- just like we did. On the other hand, an experienced enough programmer can easily gain 10-15 upvotes within the first 2 days on SO (saw many of these too), so for such user my proposal will be an easy barrier to overcome. Jul 22, 2015 at 16:36
  • Think of it this way- if you will be presented with 10 questions in math from second grade, will it be hard for you to solve? Though, will you let a guy who can't answer such questions easily to teach your kids math? Jul 22, 2015 at 16:37
  • 8
    @DavidArenburg no I wouldn't. And that's not the point. I would trust him to recommend a tutor. To recommend someone who he trusts to do the job for him. That's what voting is about.
    – ryanyuyu
    Jul 22, 2015 at 16:38
  • Why will you trust him to recommend a tutor? On what grounds? Maybe he knows a guy that can easily answer these questions, but can't solve a fourth grade questions. But for the first guy the second guys ability to answer second grade is enough. Jul 22, 2015 at 16:45
  • 1
    @DavidArenburg I would trust him enough because he isn't alone in judging the 4th grade-level tutor. That single user might be fooled, but the rest of the community probably wouldn't be. That means they would not recommend the same tutor, perhaps even disapprove of that tutor with a downvote.
    – ryanyuyu
    Jul 22, 2015 at 16:53
  • I'll tell you that, judging by the amount of very bad questions/answers with way too many upvotes, that assumption of yours doesn't seem right to me, but I guess we can agree to disagree. Jul 22, 2015 at 17:19
  • Waitaminute ... you don't need 15 upvotes / 150 rep in order to vote up other peoples questions & answers, you need only 15 rep to do so. Even if your proposed limit were something like 2 upvotes on answers (the equivalent of 20 rep) ... it is only 2 upvotes needed to get the necessary rep. (however I agree there are many problems with raising the rep requirement at all)
    – Stephen P
    Jul 23, 2015 at 1:08
  • I've been seeing a lot of suspected up-vote fraud lately. You'll see a ridiculously awful answer, followed by an up-vote or two after about 20-60 seconds. I highly suspect shadow accounts being used. And I'm talking about really bad questions. So +1 from me. Jul 23, 2015 at 11:37
  • 1
    @StephenP Yes, currently you only need 15 rep. However, the proposal that this answer is discussing is that you would need 15 upvotes before you could then upvote yourself. Jul 23, 2015 at 12:20
  • 1
    @Tensibai yes it would be wrong. That's what downvotes are for. Funny how that link you mentioned, there is one (un-voted) comment of dissent but no downvotes. Please don't hesitate to downvote this meta-answer if you don't agree with most of it. Likewise, if you actually agree with most of it upvote it.
    – ryanyuyu
    Jul 23, 2015 at 13:41
44

it seems like only low rep users upvote, while all the high rep users just gave up on the whole system (from comments)

Agreed. I think the whole voting system needs a revision.

  • Any downvote I cast on new questions or answers without commenting about why I did so is countered within mere seconds by someone else. This happens every time, unless the post I vote on is clearly and utterly crap.
  • Any downvote I cast after commenting why I think that was a reasonable thing to do will often cause discussion in comments, and the question still gets a counter-upvote half of the time.
  • Any question that mentions a technique that makes someone go "Wow that's cool", like Unity or XNA (Woohoo games!), MongoDB or other document storage (Yay web scale!), image or audio processing (Cool, I don't know anything about that!), sockets (Wow, you can send data over a network?) or anything else that's more complicated than an if() statement will be upvoted within seconds of being posted, regardless the quality of the question. Any downvote I cast based on the contents of the post will be countered even before it's cast.
  • Answers are not peer reviewed through voting. I have (not on purpose) seen this happen by posting answers to low-hanging-fruit questions: the tone of the answer brought me many upvotes, while the contents were debatable or even plain non-compiling or wrong. Of course I fixed the answer afterwards.
  • Many (old) answers that don't explain what they do but provide copy-pasteable code that solves some problem in some way (but introduces others!) is massively upvoted, hardly ever with the pitfalls mentioned in the comments,even more rarely are downvoted, and no competing answers that explain the problem and possible solutions thoroughly are posted.

To me, the score of a post indicates how many people liked it or whose problem it solved directly, not its quality. If we want the latter, we need a change. I don't directly have a proposal for that, but wanted to get this off my chest.

If I'm carefully considering an upvote through reading, fact-checking and possibly running the posted code myself (as opposed to a thoughtless Facebook-esque "like") and I see the post has been upvoted multiple times in the meantime, I often won't vote on it anymore. Democracy is nice and all, but maybe not so in this regard.

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  • 20
    [insert joke about 5 upvotes in 2 minutes that invalidates above post...]
    – CodeCaster
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:17
  • @2Dee not less nice, just redefine the concept of niceness, so upvotes doesn't mean you are being nice (or downvotes being rude).
    – Braiam
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:47
  • 2
    @2Dee a few offensive-flags will auto-delete a comment... flag this answer for moderator attention to get it restored. It wasn't offensive.
    – CodeCaster
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:03
  • This sounds a little unusual to me. Even if it's your personal experience, it's not what I generally see with other users on the site. Jul 22, 2015 at 13:20
  • So, essentially that would be moving to something more like the concept of up/downvote on Skeptics.SE?
    – nico
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:23
  • 1
    Counter-votes are problematic, I think this could be solved by a color scale or something similar to show just a ballpark value. Alternatively, scores could be completely hidden or restricted to a higher privilege tier.
    – j.i.h.
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:42
  • 1
    To me, the score of a post indicates how many people liked it or whose problem it solved directly, not its quality. If we want the latter, we need a change. I find this statement baffling--I can think of no better reason for an upvote a post than it solved your problem. Any question that mentions a technique that makes someone go "Wow that's cool"... This is a positive, we all want SO to be comprehensive, no? Sometimes an imperfect question can still be good in that it will cover a novel area.
    – j.i.h.
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:56
  • 1
    Many (old) answers that don't explain what they do but provide copy-pasteable code that solves some problem in some way (but introduces others!) is massively upvoted, hardly ever with the pitfalls mentioned in the comments People can still add comments/make companion answers, and I would hope you'd point out the pitfalls you see. A copy-pastable snippet with a good explanation would get even more votes. In general, it seems to me that putting quality before usefulness is putting the cart before the horse. And people vote for a multitude of reasons and I like to hope that it averages out.
    – j.i.h.
    Jul 22, 2015 at 14:06
  • 7
    @j.i.h. no. I find questions where the accepted answer is a copy-pasteable piece of code the least interesting, and I find the quality of such answers appaling. A good answer in my opinion follows the mantra "perceived problem - possible solution(s) - code implementing those solutions - pitfalls of the mentioned code". Not "copy-pasteable code without explanation". How many people "liked" an answer is not an indication of its quality. There's already hundreds of thousands of developers in our field who can't program, but only copy-paste. I want Q & A to teach you something.
    – CodeCaster
    Jul 22, 2015 at 14:10
  • 7
    I didn't downvote, but would lean that way. This is just a laundry list of things you want to whinge about related to how other people vote, with no argument for believing these other people to be low-rep. The q is tagged discussion, so that's fair play, but I don't think this adds much. And you can hardly complain about weird idiosyncrasies like countervoting when you have your own -- abstaining because you see "multiple" upvotes already (mentioned in the last para). Also, while the OP's comment was about rep, the OP's proposed feature is different.
    – Frank
    Jul 22, 2015 at 14:22
  • 4
    @Frank thanks. I cannot prove the votes that I'm talking about to be from low-rep users, so I won't address that. I indeed refrain from voting when the vote-counter updates multiple times while I'm moving my mouse, you can call that a idiosyncrasy indeed. I just mentioned it for completeness - I would very well like to see votes to be cast in a well-thought out manner (which cannot be if a post is mere seconds old, as one hasn't even had the time to thoroughly read it), hence the sneer to democracy, where people vote on gut feeling rather than research.
    – CodeCaster
    Jul 22, 2015 at 14:24
  • 1
    @CodeCaster: yes, the comment was auto-nuked on the basis of a naughty word. No, moderators cannot resurrect it (we can only undelete what we deleted ourselves).
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jul 22, 2015 at 17:02
  • 1
    What about a separate vote for "This fixed my problem"? Or just more verbose rating in general? Google Play has gone to this recently. Instead of just 1-5 stars, you rate different categories; controls, graphics, etc. Here we could rate "Post Quality", "helpfulness", "Easy to understand", etc. Just thinking outloud...
    – user736893
    May 11, 2017 at 16:47
  • Few things; downvotes on answers are semi-expensive for low rep users; partially out of respect and partially out of the expense of downvoting, if I find a bad answer I usually give answerers a comment then a significant amount of time to fix the post before downvoting, I usually follow up though. I concur with your observation that "wow that's cool" gets a lot of upvotes, but I'm not sure that's limited to low rep users, I remember a meta post where some high rep users straight up admitted that they do this and think it's even good for the site...
    – jrh
    Dec 30, 2018 at 21:17
  • ... I have also seen the "low hanging fruit gets upvotes" and the "wrong accepted FGITW answer gets upvotes" (IMO this one is particularly harmful sometimes) cases, and I think they are very common. I am guessing that these two limitations are unfortunately by design in SE; as much as we might dislike it, SE does reward people who post first, and popularity; you can argue that this is against SE's goal of creating a repository of information and in my opinion you would be correct.
    – jrh
    Dec 30, 2018 at 21:20
29

I'm against this proposal, not because I don't agree that there is a problem, but because I think it won't have much of an effect, and has several downsides (see user000001's answer).

You have observed low-quality answers being upvoted, and immediately jumped to the conclusion without evidence that it is low-rep users (meaning users in the range between the current rep cutoff for allowing upvotes and the proposed cutoff) who are doing it, and that restricting their upvoting abilities is the way to counter it. But since none of us know who is responsible for the upvotes on a given question and answer, this is just speculation. In fact it's reasonable to suspect the opposite. In general, the number of upvotes that someone has cast is roughly proportional to their level of participation on the site, which (apart from a few exceptional individuals) is roughly proportional to their reputation. So given that rep is highly concentrated among a relatively small number of users it's safe to assume that most of the total upvotes are also coming from a small number of users, even if people (allegedly) stop upvoting as much once they get to a certain level of 10K+ or 20K+ (since these users are a tiny percentage of the total). Maybe I'm wrong, but the point is we just don't know.

Low rep users mostly post questions when they have a problem and don't participate otherwise. If you see 5+ upvotes on an answer to a question, it is most likely coming from users who were browsing questions while looking for something to answer and saw the answer and upvoted it. This isn't the typical low rep user, because anyone who is doing that has most likely already answered a few questions and pulled well clear of any minimum threshold for upvoting (current or proposed).

Edit: Just to clarify (in case this is the reason for downvotes) I'm not claiming that number of upvotes follows the exact same distribution as rep, I'm just saying that, similar to rep, it is likely a small number of people responsible for most of the upvoting/downvoting, and they are unlikely to be at the lower end of the rep spectrum that would be affected by any change. If you doubt this then click on a few random profiles of users of different rep levels and see how many times they have voted.

9
  • 6
    I wish people downvoting this would explain why. While I don't agree with everything, I believe you might be just right on one key fact here : it's probably not the 1rep users who are upvoting stuff just to counter-balance others, in which case restricting voting rights based on rep would not be ideal. +1
    – 2Dee
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:14
  • 1
    'observed low-quality answers being upvoted, and immediately jumped to the conclusion without evidence that it is low-rep users (meaning users in the range between the current rep cutoff for allowing upvotes and the proposed cutoff) who are doing it' umm.. how could evidence, either way, be obtained? Jul 22, 2015 at 13:23
  • 3
    @MartinJames, we ask a CM to perform an analysis. A lot of the assumptions in this thread need such an analysis.
    – Andy Mod
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:43
  • 1
    @2Dee Mainly "it's safe to assume that most of the total upvotes are also coming from a small number of users" Not my observation on chef tag at least, few enougth people acting on this tag over 200 rep to be sure they won't be upvoting what is upvoted usually (low frequency tag).
    – Tensibai
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:50
  • @Tensibai indeed, behavior seems to vary depending on the tag, which complicates the issue even further :)
    – 2Dee
    Jul 22, 2015 at 14:00
  • 1
    @2Dee I'm unsure the behavior change that much between tags, for many tags I follow (chef, php, awk, regex) the behavior sounds the same, vast majority of low rep users not used/informed of SO rules do bad content. In high frequency tags like awk or regex, there's more active experts who clean off question/answers and the voting system is OK. In php, there's few active experts, and the overall quality is lower. And in Chef, it is so erratic we can forget it.
    – Tensibai
    Jul 22, 2015 at 14:21
  • 1
    Oh... here's one candidate: stackoverflow.com/questions/31578103/… Jul 23, 2015 at 11:35
  • 1
    ^^ four upvotes and an accept on a somewhat trivial, multi-duped Q&A. Even given that, the answer is, optimistically, misleading. Jul 23, 2015 at 11:37
  • @MartinJames Thanks for the link.
    – Tensibai
    Jul 23, 2015 at 13:31
26

Is this really an issue?

I am yet to be convinced that this is an issue. Low quality answers can be usurped by a superior answer, down-voted and flagged for removal for incredibly poor ones.

A quick analysis shows that 88% of upvotes and 91% of downvotes are owned by users that now meet the revised criteria's implied reputation threshold (150).

Should upvotes be seen as a measure of quality?

The tool tip for an upvote on an answer states: This answer is useful. Clearly this is a subjective decision; answers may be useful for a variety of reasons and even low quality answers may be useful. Indeed, an answer may be useful because it was quick and parsimonious rather than drawn out and comprehensive. However, a more comprehensive answer should in the long run be able to assist more people and therefore attract upvotes, if people have the privileges to be able to do so. The proposed policy of limiting voting to those already proven to be proficient in the tag may make it more difficult to attract votes and therefore feedback from the inexperienced, who SO was designed to assist.

Does this help the community?

I think that by segregating voting rights on this basis creates a kind of elitism that is not beneficial to the community as a whole. As mentioned above, the inexperienced would be disenfranchised and a clique of those that do have voting rights can conspire to exclude new members. A new community (or tag) with this rule would not allow anyone to vote since there would be no-one to vote to grant other users the right to vote.

9
  • 5
    The "revised criteria's implied reputation threshold (150)" isn't based on some random rep (as I was trying to emphasize in bold- but with no luck it seems) but by "by the amount of upvotes you have earned by answering questions only". This is basically the whole idea behind my question. Jul 22, 2015 at 13:24
  • 2
    The reason that most votes are held by users who are now above the proposed threshold, does mean that they were above the proposed threshold when they voted.
    – Jaap
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:28
  • @DavidArenburg I realise that, but it was the quickest way to provide some relevant evidence to the argument. Aside from bounties, the only feasible way of getting this amount of reputation is from upvotes. Granted this includes questions too, but I don't see why people who have asked well received questions but not provided any answers should be excluded.
    – James
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:32
  • @Jaap No, we cannot know that. However, in any case, They have subsequently proven themselves to be eligible.
    – James
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:33
  • 2
    "who SO was designed to assist" ? SO was not designed to be a high quality Question/Answer knowledge base ?
    – Tensibai
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:35
  • @Tensibai Jeff introduced it as having the ultimate intent of collectively increasing the sum total of good programming knowledge in the world. Clearly this is increased faster by helping the inexperienced. blog.codinghorror.com/introducing-stackoverflow-com
    – James
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:49
  • 10
    @James I disagree that helping the inexperienced increase the sum total of good programming knowledge in many cases
    – Tensibai
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:54
  • @Tensibai Then the help was insufficient.
    – James
    Jul 23, 2015 at 11:28
  • 2
    @James that's exactly the point of David, the help is insufficient but get nevertheless tons of upvote because it solves the immediate problem for the lazy, and the experienced users seeing the flaw can't overcome this flow of upvote
    – Tensibai
    Jul 23, 2015 at 11:33
13

I don't believe that the threshold for upvoting should be increased. Upvotes are very important for the operation of the system for the following reasons:

  • They encourage participation for the people answering. More upvotes means more people willing to answer a question.

  • They help distinguish working solutions from flawed/non-working ones. You don't need to be an expert to see that an answer was helpful to you.

  • They allow for more people to participate to the various review/moderation procedures, through the reputation that the user gains.

If it wasn't for the problem of sock puppets and voting rings, I would propose the upvote limit to be reduced, not increased.

Regarding the supposed "problem" of some answers having a higher score that someone may believe just, there is a simple solution for this: Downvote the answer, and add a comment explaining what is wrong with it. If your argument is correct and convincing, other people will also downvote, so the score of the answer will be "corrected".

9
  • 3
    I don't agree with your second point (and not so much with the others as well...), I saw lots of answers that look correct (mostly because the poster claims it is) being upvoted (probably by someone who didn't completely understand what the answer does...)
    – Cath
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:01
  • 10
    Downvoting the answers to the VLQ questions from the rings and puppets costs rep. I would lose it faster than I could gain it. Jul 22, 2015 at 12:02
  • 2
    The flaw with the conclusion is the "automatic" upvote on certain tags, non working/blatantly dangerous answers are upvoted by low rep users, which outclass the downvotes by experts anyhow
    – Tensibai
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:05
  • @MartinJames If you suspect that a question/answer was posted just for gaining rep through a voting ring, you should probably flag it for moderator attention.
    – user000001
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:06
  • 7
    I don't believe that in the current state "They help distinguish working solutions for flawed/non-working ones", quite the contrary in many cases. Programing isn't just about copy pasting some code on some random example and see that it accidentally worked. I believe that code should be bullet proof for various situations. It should be memory efficient, fast, it should not potentially brake other code and etc. Every language has it's own philosophy too, a working code doesn't mean that this is the correct way to solve the problem in that specific language as it would in some other language. Jul 22, 2015 at 12:08
  • 9
    "[upvotes] encourage participation for the people answering" - you shouldn't care. You should want to post answers to increase the amount of high-quality content on the web, not for imaginary points. "[upvotes] help distinguish working solutions for flawed/non-working ones" - they don't, see my answer. "[reputation gained through upvotes] allows for more people to participate to the various review/moderation procedures" - the proposal is not to never give out reputation points anymore.
    – CodeCaster
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:33
  • @DavidArenburg I agree that all these are desirable properties for an answer. However, there are many cases where a non-optimal answer is sufficient for solving a problem. Something is often better than nothing.
    – user000001
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:34
  • 4
    And many times it is worse than nothing. Jul 22, 2015 at 12:47
  • 6
    ^^^ what @DavidArenburg says. So many upvotes on so much crapness:(( Jul 22, 2015 at 13:17
13

While I understand your concern, I think changing the minimum rep requirement would, as said in other answers, cause more problems than it solves. It would very likely offer a disincentive to answering questions from new users and further the level of frustration experienced by new users.

I would suggest that exposing up/downvote totals at a lower threshold and trying to encourage users to downvote answers more often would solve the problem.

It may sound a little silly but I think the -1 rep for downvoting is a problem for newer users. In their desire to accrue rep and privileges they're more hesitant to downvote which is part of the problem you're seeing.

I also think that downvotes should probably carry a little more weight. It currently takes 5 downvotes to offset the rep earned from 1 upvote, so users are given an incentive to leave their bad answers in place.

The problem isn't so much that new users are upvoting crap, its that they aren't downvoting, and when they do those downvotes aren't as visible or effective as they could be.

1
  • 3
    Answer downvote of -4 seems fair considering that Answer-upvote to Answer-downvote would be the same proportion as Question-upvote to Question-downvote.
    – Artjom B.
    Jul 22, 2015 at 20:18
9

Although I understand the point David made, I think his solution is a bit too radical and will discourage new users from participating (as was already extensively put forward in several other answers).

Another possibility is a more gradual increase in upvoting rights. For example: 1 upvote per day with 15/25 rep, 5 per day by 100 rep, 10 by 250, from 500 as it is now (or something like that).

New users get voting rights quite early and get rewarded with additional voting rights when they gain rep, thus also addressing the engagement point @Thomas mentioned. Furthermore, such a gradual increase will force them think twice to who they will give their precious upvote, thus making them really consider what a good post is.

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  • 7
    This is similar to the current behavior for determining the number of flags a user gets
    – ryanyuyu
    Jul 22, 2015 at 20:14
  • I would guess most users with low reputation that would be up-voting bad questions/answers are doing so because they got help from rather then their quality so likely wont change anything.
    – Joe W
    Jul 22, 2015 at 20:16
  • 2
    @JoeW I don't get your point. This approach would mean that their (supposedly bad) voting behavior would be limited. It could even be 2 votes/day at 15 rep, with one more vote granted per 100 rep, up to 40, like flags and like deletion votes stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/moderator-tools
    – Frank
    Jul 22, 2015 at 20:26
  • What I am saying is I think the low rep users are more likely to find a question and vote on it via google rather than from browsing the site and would be unlikely to use many votes in a day anyway.
    – Joe W
    Jul 22, 2015 at 20:30
  • 2
    Like the idea. @JoeW - the votes from users who found answer via Google and the answer helped are exactly the once that help SO. The problematic once are for people randomly clicking on multiple questions and voting in a way whatever they feel like and not based on whether it helped OR whether it is correct (i.e. based on "let me help low-rep user" or "I'll upvote my friend/coworker") - and as you've pointed first group will not be hurt by restriction at all and damage from second one will be limited. (Not sure if your comment was even disagreement with the post at all). Jul 24, 2015 at 20:02
  • 1
    @Frank I like the idea of granting one more vote per 100 rep gained. It would give several intermediate goals in gaining reputation. The only downside would be that is will become a bit harder to get several voting badges (suffrage, vox populi, civic duty & electorate).
    – Jaap
    Jul 25, 2015 at 5:31
-2

I understand your concern, but I am afraid I disagree. The reason are both logical and ideological. I will list all reasons.

1) The reasoning is not completely logical. The problem is how you define a good or bad answer and a good or bad question, which may be subjective. Inexperienced users will likely ask fundamental questions. Does this mean that there are bad questions? My opinion is that they does not. Further, an answer to a fundamental question does not need to be bad just because the question is fundamental. Neither does an answer necessarily need to be good, just because it answers a difficult question. I have an excellent example on a good fundamental question, with a really good answer about Why is processing a sorted array faster than an unsorted array?. Here I would rather promote a notice in the beginning which provides example on good reasons to upvote. For example, a question should not be upvoted if a simple google search gives the answer or if the question seems to be useful to a small amount of users. Further an answer should not be upvoted unless it can be considered helpful (In particular, if a user is unable to confirm its correctness it should definitely not be upvoted and if a user finds an answer undoubtedly incorrect it should definitely be downvoted).

2) Does a short, concise answer mean that a question is bad? My opinion here is that this depends on the question. A short concise question may require a short concise answer. This does not necessarily mean that the question or the answer is bad. This is an example of this question, Differences between HashMap and Hashtable?. The question is fairly fundamental, but it have got many upvoted, since there is no explicitly stated difference in the documentation. The programmer is left to analyze this on his own. I will not comment on the quality of the answer, since I does not know enough for this. This question could of course gain on a more thorough answer as well, but sometimes a short answer is enough.

3) Low rep users, does not necessarily mean stupid users or ignorant users. They not even need to be "noobies". Further, a high rep user does not mean the user does not throw away arbitrary upvotes or downvotes. I would rather see that new users are made aware of the problem and encouraged to be restrictive with upvotes and downvotes and that they are instructed when these tools are suitable to use.

4) Raising the rep for voting would decrease the liberalism on in the community. It would, as already stated, be a basis for elitism. It gives away a message as "You are not good enough to make your voice heard". This makes sense for voting to national elections etc, since young people does not have the same responsibilities in society as older people. In a community like SE, it does however, not make sense. Anyone can join here and anyone who joins must start with asking a question or answer a question. If any of these gets upvoted the user can be declared as a real person (thus not a machine) and also a person with, at least, some knowledge about the necessary topic. The ideology should have a high level of liberalism and assume that each person can be held responsible for his own actions. Then, people which have been proven trustworthy and dedicated to SE should of course still, be offered further responsibilities as it is now.

So to concluded, the reputation does not need to say much about the members abilities to distinguish good answers from bad ones. It does neither say much about the users ability to take responsibilities for its own actions. I have seen bad answers with high rep and good answer with low rep. Still, it is impossible to say if there always have been this way or if they are bad due to aging. It is also hard to say, by looking at the post, if there what reputation the users voting for it has. So I does really believe that we should keep the requirements as they already are.

1
  • "Low rep users, does not necessarily mean stupid users or ignorant users. They not even need to be "noobies"" - Never neither said or implied that. Also, I'm not talking in "rep" terms at all here (your fourth and fifth points) Jul 26, 2015 at 10:06
-5

I think that we should have some sort of "guest up-vote" system. Rep 15+ means you can up-vote, but it makes a minimized rep up for recipient. The votes could even be viewed in a breakdown of new users and people whose up-votes meant full power of 10 rep. They would get this power after they have achieved 100 rep, because that means they won't just spam their votes. This also means the "vox populi" badge won't inspire people to just up-vote everything they see until they get it. I don't think we should raise the entire bar. This also prevents someone making two accounts and spamming their votes between them into the squillions. I feel like newbies should be able to say what they like, and also that they could even have a no-effect no-cost down-vote as well, that the poster would see alone, and that it came from a new user, so that people whose opinions matter can vote either way without too much gain or loss of rep for veterans.

-14

A compromise method would be to add a voting filter, something like "also show reputable voters separately". Users could check a box on their profile, possibly with a radio button reputation number, (i.e. 1000, 10,000, 50,000...). It'd a sort of Senate/House or Lords/Commons contrast. By default such filters would be turned off, so new users would see just what we see today.

An added feature might be to refine filters so that one might select by reputation within particular tags -- perhaps we don't wish to include hi-rep intercal expert votes when considering answers for befunge, we might only want to see the votes of befunge experts.

So there could be an algorithm to rank by the most reputable voters in the relevent tags concerned.


Note: in certain cases such filters might be used to find out how certain users voted. Such as if only one user had n points, and we filtered by n votes.

One remedy for that might include forbidding threshold values of n where n would be revealing, so if there were too few users above n, any radio button to select by values greater than n/10 would vanish.

-28

I think the current upvote/downvote system is OK, but we can add some new matrix. The power of an upvote/downvote would depend upon the person's reputation points. For example, the upvote of a person having 1000 reputation will matter more than a person having 50 reputation. Similar is the case with downvote also.

This way we can give everyone a right of upvoting/downvoting and the best questions are only upvoted.

8
  • 18
    This is inherently unfair. Well-established users would become too influential.
    – ryanyuyu
    Jul 22, 2015 at 12:58
  • 11
    It also assumes that everybody who's knowledgeable on a subject has been busily earning rep on SO for that subject. If Jon Skeet didn't have 147K in C#, he'd still be a leading expert on the matter
    – ABMagil
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:02
  • 4
    @ryanyuyu you have a point. my bad . For downvoters, was just sharing my geniun thoughts!!! Jul 22, 2015 at 13:08
  • 7
    @SidharthDash Downvotes on meta don't necessarily mean the post is bad, just that they disagree with it, so you don't need to worry about it. Jul 22, 2015 at 16:54
  • 1
    @ryanyuyu On the other hand, Google PageRank is based on this concept. While I'm against counting different votes differently, giving posts a hidden "relevance score" based on upvotes from people with tag badges and making them appear near the top of a page, could improve the site experience for people who only read the first 2 answers.
    – aebabis
    Jul 22, 2015 at 17:01
  • I like this idea, although I think the effect of high rep should be tiny. Something like having a bronze badge in one of the tags on a question should make votes count 10% more, silver 25% and gold 50%. The problem though is that even if that was considered fair, it would require redesign of votes to accommodate fractional votes... Not worth it Jul 22, 2015 at 23:04
  • 1
    @pnuts of course rep means something- it means you've made Stack Overflow better. But that has nothing to do with whether you know C#.
    – ABMagil
    Jul 23, 2015 at 3:37
  • 1
    I fear this would have a bad impact on the democracy of the community. It would be as if the people with better education got more votes in the national election. Except for that, it could probably impact on the fundamental questions as well, which unexperienced programmers normally ask. These questions are probably the ones which have reach most new programmers during the years of SE.
    – patrik
    Jul 24, 2015 at 22:29

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