I'm aware we've got quite a lot of questions here on downvotes without comments, such as this one and this one and this one. I've had a read through those already.
TL;DR, I (and some others) have answers we've posted on our own libraries at -1 when "less-good" ones are at 0, potentially confusing new users, and want to know what's allowed to get it "fixed" (to at least even on 0)
Update: Well I did, until you all found them and upvoted my answers of the type mentioned... General question still remains, especially so I can point other open source developers I meet with the same issue to a solution which doesn't ideally require them to post about it here on meta!
Recently, I've had a few times where people have asked questions about using an Open Source library that I help maintain, adding the tag for the project themselves. (I actually help with a few projects, but there's on in particular). The library is fairly well used, but doesn't seem to get that move love on StackOverflow, and questions + answers tend to stay at fairly low scores, especially compared to some tags. Not the end of the world, I got the Unsung Hero from it.
My problem is that a few times now, people have downvoted my answers without comments, where I know my answer to be correct, since I help write the library in question, and often added unit tests based on the OP's question to verify fixes! You then end up with a 0-voted less-good answer above mine at -1, which isn't as good. One case recently another person who'd commented on the question expressed bafflement that my answer was downvoted to -1, and voted me back up. Other cases, my answer remains at -1, for no apparent reason.
Speaking with another friend today who also helps work on an open source library with fair usage but low votes, they've also been affected by the same thing. They also find it baffling, and it has put them off answering on StackOverflow on their own library, which is clearly not a good result for anyone.
The drop of -2 rep points is something I can cope with, given how many I have, and the "you're wrong" my ego can cope with, as I know I'm right as I work on the library! Since the downvote had no comment, I don't know what was wrong. Maybe they were grumpy that I told them they had to upgrade to a newer version for a fix, maybe they're grumpy that the fix wasn't added until the reported it, maybe something else entirely, I'll never know, so I can't fix/help. What worries me is newbies coming along, seeing my correct answer as -1 and a less good one at 0, and following the less-good advice.
I know a few people offline who use StackOverflow a bit, and I know quite a few people on other StackExchange sites. I could, since there are only a few, reach out to some people who don't really know the library and ask them to upvote my answer. However, I feel a bit bad about doing that, without checking here first. I could ask other people from the project to join StackOverflow then upvote their first answer then have them upvote mine, but again that feels a little off. The line between sock-puppet and meat-puppet then also seems a little blurry. I could do either, but that doesn't help my other friend (well, unless they use me as their meat-puppet...)
In the case where someone get a downvote to -1 with no comment, on a question where they help write the library in question so know for sure that they're right, where there aren't buckets of votes going around, and where "worse" answers then show above (eg at 0), what is the StackOverflow "socially acceptable" way to respond?
I could ask other people from the project to join StackOverflow then upvote their first answer then have them upvote mine, but again that feels a little off. The line between sock-puppet and meat-puppet then also seems a little blurry.
That's not blurry at all. It's a crystal clear case of voting fraud.