It was brought to my attention earlier today due to an answer being posted (in which the question was a typographical error) that the downvote privilege page almost contradicted the tooltip shown for the downvote answer arrow. I was then linked a post regarding this topic, which I've read, but this matter is different. I've also read through this post, but again the criteria isn't specific.
I've always understood the downvote (for answers) just as the tooltip suggests: this answer is not helpful. In other words, I've interpreted it as "This answer won't help or provide any future readers any useful information", but the downvote privilege page mentions:
When should I vote down?
Use your downvotes whenever you encounter an egregiously sloppy, no-effort-expended post, or an answer that is clearly and perhaps dangerously incorrect.
Ok, I understand the criteria for questions (egregiously sloppy, no-effort-expended). But the answer part is where it loses me. With my interpretation, anything that will not help future users is worthy of a downvote. To me, that includes:
- Blatantly wrong answers
- Spam or abusive answers
- Answers that will not help a broad audience
- Answers to primarily opinion based questions
- Link only answers
By 'Answers that will not help a broad audience', I mean something like a typographical error. The answer may be useful to the OP him or herself but not to a lot future readers (or the 'broader audience'). (The way I see the site's goal, we're not here to help any specific questioner, but to leave general answer to help many future readers).
Now, you can see a problem. My criteria for downvoting is more broad than the one in the privilege page site, encompassing more answers, but this still (in my honest opinion) is under the umbrella of 'this answer is not useful. This means that the page contradicts what the tooltip says. I suggest we change the privilege page to mention downvoting when the answer is not useful, not just because it's dangerously or blatantly wrong.