There are some tags that should immediately be down voted (for being off-topic), such as project-management, but vhdl isn't one of them.
If your question has code, it doesn't matter what the code does, as long as it meets the quality standards of SO (grammar, MVCE, length, etc).
Some of the questions posted under that tag do deserve down votes because they don't meet the quality guidelines for the site. This is true for any other topic, too.
I checked what's on and off topic for Electronics SE.
On topic:
- a specific electronics design problem
- the theory and simulation of electromagnetic forces
- a communication scheme
- the writing of firmware for bare-metal or RTOS applications
They do list "Programming software for a PC" as being off topic, but I think that VHDL never falls into that category because it's only used for hardware. If it's on topic there too, you have a choice of where to post it. Personally, I think that you would get better results on a smaller, dedicated site.
This, however, doesn't explain the down votes on what seem to be well written posts (as far as I can tell not knowing the subject). In fact, the post you linked seems to be the only one not negative (which is probably the meta effect more than anything else).
The tag is fairly small, with ~3,000 questions, so it's even more suspicious this would happen. Most of the recent posts have less than 40 views, and I'm sure that many of those are the meta effect.
The system currently doesn't detect serial down voting on tags, so there's not much we can do without a mod. We might even need a super mod (ie, a developer). But there are some things that we can look at to make a hypothesis:
It takes 125 reputation to down vote, so it has to be one or more people who have at least spent some time on the site.
It's possible that they don't have the ability to close vote yet, which would mean that they're < 3k rep.
We're not seeing any vandalism, which is good (but it might have provided more information if we were).
The down votes are VERY evenly distributed. This is an important detail, because it's very unlikely that it's a link from Reddit or something (otherwise we would see multiple down votes on posts).
I'm steering towards the idea of a single vigilante, because it's very unlikely that multiple people would be able to coordinate like that.
If I'm right, (and they haven't set up a program to do this), then the down votes should all be within a time frame, which will could tell us which area on Earth the down votes come from (this also assumes that they sleep at whenever night is in their timezone).
Brad Larson's comment:
Let's say that I have identified one person who is pretty heavily downvoting posts in this tag. They're not targeting any one person, so our normal standards of handling serial downvoting don't apply... If I confront them about this, they will state that they're free to vote based on how they judge the quality of the content. The question is: how do I distinguish between votes that someone leaves based on their own strict quality standard and them abusing the voting system?
I think the best option would be to tell the user(s) that we are discussing this here on Meta. They have a right to remain anonymous (as much as we might not like it), but they should at least know that we're discussing this here. If they want to reveal themselves, then so be it.
I think the other thing we need to think about is the other type of serial voting: serial up voting. Would we be as concerned if somebody was serial up voting a tag? Maybe not...
-modelsimini
parameter tovsim
. There is no VHDL code file needed to cause this behavior.