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Kind of related to Can we talk about the voting culture here on Meta?, but that one is about downvoting. I want to talk about close-voting and delete-voting. For quite some time I noticed that there is a group of people on Meta who vote to close any question they don't like as off-topic, choosing varying reasons that don't actually apply. Then, after the question gets closed, the delete-votes pile up.

This results in questions asked by well-meaning but perhaps ill-informed users to be downvoted into oblivion, close-voted before someone can answer and delete-voted within the first hour of its existence. I interpret this as "We don't want your kind here, go away", which is not nice to users who genuinely want feedback or discussion. I also addressed this in my answer in 'Meta to new user: your question is a turd that cannot be polished (or: we need to Be Nice here too)'.

I'm going to have to reconstruct the history I have with this issue from my flagging history to provide some backstory.

  1. Seven months ago there was this question: Is [discussion] allowed on meta?. I flagged it at the moment it had two "cannot reproduce" close-votes, which were ridiculously inapplicable. My flag was considered "helpful" and the close-votes were invalidated by a moderator. The question is now closed as "does not seek input and discussion", which is fine, as the OP seemed to want to post a rant instead of starting a discussion.

  2. Then there was Is there a name for Stack Overflow users as a whole?. It was closed as "off-topic". Then it was reopened by five users. And closed as "opinion-based" again. I flagged, flag was marked "helpful", a mod opened the question again.

  3. After that I flagged Who is a moderator ? Are they an employee of SO?, because there were "non-repro" votes again. Sure, it might be a silly question, but that doesn't warrant close-voting with random close reasons as far as I'm concerned. This time, the flag was declined: "The user appears to be voting properly. The example you gave is a terrible question that should definitely have been closed. Perhaps you should review https://stackoverflow.com/help/whats-meta"

  4. Next question from my flagging history: Question has the answer, right after the 3rd edit. Why wasn't it noticed by future edits/mods?. The close-voters interpreted the question incorrectly, and picked the wrong duplicate. My flag was marked "helpful", but the question remains closed as an incorrect duplicate.

  5. Then there was this "Is this on-topic for Stack Overflow?" question: Where can I ask: Lotus Notes 8.5 Not Supporting Digital Badging. Initially I close-voted because it looked like a question that should have been posted to Main, but it was edited after which I retracted my close-vote. Yet it was robo-close-voted. My flag was marked "helpful", no visible action taken. Took quite some time to go through the reopen queue.

  6. I should be allowed to answer closed questions was again one of those cases where close-votes appeard to be abused as "I strongly disagree" votes, which is not what they are for. After two declined flags because I wasn't verbose enough, the third flag was marked "helpful" and one hour after closing it, it was reopened and remains open.

  7. Serial voting still showing on my questions 5 days after incident, cache not cleared as expected? closed as duplicate without reading or understanding the question.

I hope the pattern is clear now.

Now the problem that I'd like to discuss: it appears to me that an small crowd of 5-10 relatively low-rep (5K-20K) people are active in the review queues on Meta, and they are down-, close- and delete-voting everything that they don't like, while they (again, this is how it appears to me) hardly ever participate posting actual answers on Main.

Do we want a group that small determine what gets discussed on Meta? Do they have the right to close-vote with whatever reason they seem fit, without even trying to (or at least in some cases failing to) understand what's actually being asked in some cases, and delete-voting it so only a small group gets to read what gets posted here on a daily basis?

Alright, an edit to more expressively clarify my concerns: it appears that there are a couple of users who grind the close and reopen queue, where the tendency of voting hangs towards "close" or "leave closed" or even "delete", while the questions and their comments don't appear to be read that attentively.

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    And of course, as is tradition: possible duplicate of Can we talk about the voting culture here on Meta? (no, it isn't).
    – CodeCaster
    Oct 20, 2016 at 12:36
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    @Tunaki you're right about that. Unfortunately I couldn't find any recent examples of questions that I found inappropriately deleted, but it's not like it doesn't happen.
    – CodeCaster
    Oct 20, 2016 at 12:45
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    FWIW, with regards to #7 (serial voting), I casted my Close Vote before someone pointed out that, in the comments of the answer in the duplicate question, there was some information indicating that #7 was not a duplicate, but a bug instead. So don't automatically assume that someone has malintent :)
    – user247702
    Oct 20, 2016 at 12:53
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    @Stijn yes, mistakes can be made. One close-vote does not make a difference. That question however mentions "this happend some weeks ago" (so, beyond any reasonable caching issues, refuting the duplicate), and a couple of the people I'm (not explicitly) addressing with this question closed that question from the review queue without reading it nor its comments.
    – CodeCaster
    Oct 20, 2016 at 12:59
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    Personally I kinda get the feeling that sometimes many users on meta just think they have to make a (close) vote on every question and if the question isn't super good it gets a downvote/close-vote. I think more users should know that many times you don't have to vote. If a new user asks a normal question about how something on SO works then you don't have to vote if you neither find it very good for an upvote or so bad that you would downvote. And in such situations I think many users on meta just think they have to vote and downvote and or close vote.
    – Rizier123
    Oct 20, 2016 at 13:13
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    Do beware the Pareto distribution, almost every activity at SE obeys that law. The only other pattern to look for that I can think of is the effect of chat rooms, they tend to vote as a block. I don't see a real problem otherwise, voting velocity on meta is very high, both to close and to re-open. Oct 20, 2016 at 13:35
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    I kind of dislike the way you judge experience of users purely by the reputation on the main site. Even 5k is not too low.
    – vaultah
    Oct 20, 2016 at 13:42
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    @vaultah I don't like repetition. You can't pick apart singular sentences from a story. I'm sorry that you don't like it, but it's my opinion, my observations. Also, the users I'm trying to address by that don't actively participate on Main and haven't increased their reputation significantly over the time I've watched this behavior.
    – CodeCaster
    Oct 20, 2016 at 13:47
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    @Hans the problem here on Meta is that the handful of users who grind the close queue are the same who tick off items off the reopen queue, meaning once closed often remains closed.
    – CodeCaster
    Oct 20, 2016 at 13:47
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    I am kind of disappointed to not see a close vote on this post ;)
    – Hayt
    Oct 20, 2016 at 13:59
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    Hard to imagine that the review queues play much of a role on meta. Other than that it easy to see who votes, organic voting is much harder to track. They matter much more SO due to the low view counts, meta posts never had a lack of views. 106 on this one already :) Oct 20, 2016 at 14:08
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    @vaultah Reputation is a rather inaccurate judge of experience and skill as a programmer, but it's actually quite accurate as a measure of amount of time spent participating with the site, and knowledge of how the site works, which is what CodeCaster is using it as a proxy for here.
    – Servy
    Oct 20, 2016 at 14:27
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    Another recent example. The OP actually had to post a separate Meta question to find out why his unpopular but on-topic answer was deleted. Oct 20, 2016 at 14:34
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    @Servy I was mostly referring to people who participate in review queues and editors. They don't get reputation for what they do, but I'm pretty sure they know the culture and rules of the site quite well. Labelling them as inexperienced only because they don't have popular answers to get steady reputation income from doesn't feel right to me. If you disagree with this, that's fine.
    – vaultah
    Oct 20, 2016 at 16:48
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    Let me see if this isn't a case of I want to see a pattern for something I don't like. This SEDE query shows (for non-deleted questions) the users with their close, reopen, delete, undelete counts. Now I think I see the users you're after in that list but I also see the usual suspects. Isn't the lower traffic on meta a much larger contributor to what you see?
    – rene
    Oct 20, 2016 at 21:17

3 Answers 3

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I've noticed this a lot more too, and I'm working (in whatever spare time I have nowadays) to craft a few SEDE queries to see how frequently a post is voted to be deleted on Meta to see if it's really necessary.

Let me state my opinion here so that it's clear.

I believe that it's fair game to downvote a question here on Meta, especially if it's not an ideal approach to a problem, is ill-researched, or is just plain ranty, but I don't really like deletion of questions here unless it's absolutely necessary. Save for users mistaking* the site for Stack Overflow, there are very few questions which actually need to be deleted.

In that regard, it's also not a bad thing if we get a few more gold-badge holders in the three key tags we have here. Giving more people the ability to undo a bad dupe can only be a good thing, and I hope that others will soon gain that privilege.

I'll address your concerns in turn; I largely agree with them, and I do hope I'm not contributing to the issue. At least, I don't think I am...

...it appears to me that an incrowd of 5-10 relatively low-rep (5K-20K) people are brigading Meta, and they are down-, close- and delete-voting everything that they don't like, while they hardly ever participate on Main. A lot of this action seems to come from the Meta review queues.

Ah, how enviable it must be to consider 5K-20K reputation "low"...

I don't disagree that there is an in-crowd of users doing this kind of thing, but I will disagree with the other two parts.

  • Users here heavily participate on Main, especially considering that Stack Overflow's reputation is the exact same as Meta Stack Overflow's reputation.
  • The review queues here are very hard to really gain any traction in; I'm inclined to believe that these actions are taken outside of the queue, especially considering that the users who fit this profile are normally equipped enough to "handle" the issue themselves.

Do they have the right to close-vote with whatever reason they seem fit, without even trying to (or at least failing to) understand what's actually being asked in some cases, and delete-voting it so only a small group gets to read what gets posted here on a daily basis?

Close vote with just whatever reason? I'd prefer if they didn't do that but there's no mechanical thing stopping one from doing this; it's up to us as the community to overturn/challenge closures which we feel are unjustified.

If it's genuinely a bad question and it does need to be closed, then I really don't see any reason to rearrange the chairs on the Titanic.

Deletion, as I mentioned earlier, does strike a bit of a nerve with me in some regards. As I said before, there aren't that many questions which need to be outright deleted, but there are quite a few which do deserve to be closed or downvoted. Deletion is one of those things that makes it tougher for a user to either figure out what happened with the comment chain (since comments are no longer accessible through the inbox once a post is deleted), and not enough users know to look through their history to look for it. Besides that, once the question is deleted, they figure that's pretty much the end of it - they can't get any more input to their problem.

We need to take a more critical look at that and see what's going on there. I get a sneaking suspicion that more content is being buried in this fashion that shouldn't be.


*: I'd love to give the benefit of the doubt to some users, but for those who ask a coding question on Meta after they've got something like 5 questions on the main site...

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  • Very rough SEDE query for unpopular Meta posts that were deleted and then undeleted. Finding questions that were closed and re-opened would be easier since SEDE can't search posts that are currently deleted. Oct 20, 2016 at 19:46
  • @ThisSuitIsBlackNot: PostsWithDeleted will get you that kind of information. It just won't generate a link to the post automatically.
    – Makoto
    Oct 20, 2016 at 19:46
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    Wow, I had no idea SEDE included deleted posts. Oct 20, 2016 at 20:24
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    "The review queues here are very hard to really gain any traction in" enter robo-reviewers.
    – Braiam
    Oct 20, 2016 at 20:53
  • @Braiam: I genuinely doubt robo-reviewers are even vying for these queues. The person with the highest close-vote reviews borders near 3,000. That's not per quarter; that's all time. The only other person that comes close is shy of 1,800, and even then it starts to taper off. I won't deny that these people are more on-top of the queues than others would be, but I would doubt they're robo-reviewing.]
    – Makoto
    Oct 20, 2016 at 20:59
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    Did you check the /activity of them? For the top one the first 36 pages of all activity are review tasks, 3rd since may doesn't do anything other than review, 6th only has a single edit under it's belt, everything else is review task... robo-reviewers aren't only the ones that review blazing fast (in fact this is not the definition), but that seems to blindly click buttons to get the number to 0!
    – Braiam
    Oct 20, 2016 at 21:09
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    As a user with 1.9k +1 for "Ah, how enviable it must be to consider 5K-20K reputation "low"..." and all the rest
    – llrs
    Oct 21, 2016 at 9:53
  • I'm going to accept this answer as I interpret it as "Perhaps we're deleting somewhat too much content from Meta". I hope more people read and agree.
    – CodeCaster
    Oct 21, 2016 at 15:20
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they are down-, close- and delete-voting everything that they don't like

Is not that they don't like it... if you see their activities pages you will see basically no activity outside /review for most of these users! gasp Basically, most of the questions you see on the /review/close queue will end up closed one way or another, only the initial close voter had some issue with the question. Other reasons not-withstanding I believe this is fairly bigger problem.

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    Where does it say that being active on the site is mandatory before you can use /review?
    – rene
    Oct 20, 2016 at 21:20
  • @rene I'm rejecting the notion that these people close vote based on "I like/hate this", but simply burning through the queue.
    – Braiam
    Oct 20, 2016 at 21:26
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    Sure, and I tend to agree something could be better but your reasoning is flawed, IMHO. I don't think you can link site activity and their usage of /review.
    – rene
    Oct 20, 2016 at 21:31
  • @rene what reasoning? I'm asserting that since they don't have site activity, they can't come to like/dislike topics! I'm fairly certain that if they disliked those topics as the question hints, they would be more engaged on the site itself which is the only correlation I do. The cherry-picked observation is congruent with this point of view... so long as they are in /review, these users will vote to close them.
    – Braiam
    Oct 20, 2016 at 22:04
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    You have some good observations, but there seems to be a highly questionable link between "users are active almost entirely in /review" and "users will blindly vote-to-close anything they see". Can you back that up more? Oct 21, 2016 at 4:44
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    @Braiam: Can you distinguish "user is active in a queue and finds a lot of bad posts there" from "user will only ever vote one way in a queue"? Not only have you not done so yet, you seem to be militating against the need for this distinction at all, but you're perfectly comfortable labeling reviewers "robots" without actually demonstrating that they are being careless. Oct 21, 2016 at 23:22
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    @Braiam: Then why did you mention roboreviewers at all in your answer or comments, including specifically the comment I replied to last? It's sufficient to point out that they hold no personal animosity and are just going through the queue; to suggest that they are doing so clumsily and in bad faith, then refuse to back that assertion up, is unwarranted and rather rude. Oct 22, 2016 at 0:30
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    @Braiam: Or, in short: Stop calling people roboreviewers unless you really mean it. Oct 22, 2016 at 0:31
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    @NathanTuggy Here is an exhaustive classification of close votes according to the rationale applied by the voter to cast them (1) the rationale follows site policies and community standards; (2) the rationale does not follow said policies and standards; and (3) there is no rationale. The examples mentioned in the question do not fall into (1). The question places them as a case of (2) ("Close it because I don't like it"). Braiam is suggesting (3) (more specifically, the mindlessly-burning-through-the-queue case) is also a plausible classification. That is all there is to this answer.
    – duplode
    Oct 22, 2016 at 16:02
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    @duplode: Okay, but when making accusations of bad-faith reviewing against specific people, it's not enough to say "well maybe they didn't bother to close for any specific reason", you have to actually back that up with some fairly solid evidence that shows that they really made quite a few glaring mistakes that are not simply the result of plausible differences of opinion about how a question fits site policy. And this wild slinging of accusation is entirely unimportant to the answer here, or should be. Oct 22, 2016 at 19:55
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    @NathanTuggy Frankly, it is not clear to me how, after pondering about a publicly known activity pattern, saying that someone might be reviewing blindly is any more offensive than saying that someone might be willfully ignoring the community standards while reviewing. The bottom line is that an effective way of avoiding people speculating on Meta about the motives behind one's absurd close votes is not casting absurd close votes in the first place.
    – duplode
    Oct 22, 2016 at 22:18
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    @duplode: The point you're missing is that braiam has refused to actually demonstrate that the close votes were absurd. And, upon checking, they don't appear to be absurd. Maybe you disagree; maybe my check was insufficient. Make the case. Again, calling people roboreviewers without actually demonstrating how they are plainly roboting their way through reviews is bad and wrong. Oct 22, 2016 at 22:43
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    @NathanTuggy The absurd votes I was referring to were those mentioned in this question and the "opinion-based" ones against Braiam's question (the ones that led to your scrutiny), and not the ones you dug out in this thread. In any case, I simply don't see "roboreviewer" as such a grievous insult. If you allow me to speculate, you seem to be acting as if, unless there is proof that whoever Braiam is talking about is essentially and always a roboreviewer (and not, say, only in some days of the week), Braiam's comments are an attack on everyone who focuses on reviewing rather than Q&A writing.
    – duplode
    Oct 22, 2016 at 23:29
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    @duplode: Those are pretty reasonable conjectures, although I'd also note that queues (in my experience, at least) offer an excellent opportunity for shock/outrage at really outstandingly bad actions, such as No Repro votes on a question about moderator status. Oct 23, 2016 at 1:01
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    @NathanTuggy I guess we can agree on that the wide assortment of possible poor decisions requires a suitably diverse assortment of places where they can be made visible.
    – duplode
    Oct 23, 2016 at 1:49
-5

Do they have the right to close-vote with whatever reason they seem fit

In short, yes they have that right. If they think a close reason fits, they are free to apply a close vote to express that. While the examples you've pointed to are indeed questionable, many of them did ultimately get reopened. That means the system is working. A small clique (if it exists) is not going to determine what meta discusses without the agreement of everyone else on meta. Your question here is proof of that.

Back here in the real world, I do agree with you that I think that we need to be less lazy here on meta and actually read the questions posted. The examples you point to, if they are a trend, are certainly bad. We should close things less aggressively on meta since there are many more eyeballs per post here than on main. We're not getting flooded, so there's no reason to be close-vote happy. And we certainly shouldn't use close votes as super-downvotes.

Alright, an edit to more expressively clarify my concerns: it appears that there are a couple of users who grind the close and reopen queue, where the tendency of voting hangs towards "close" or "leave closed", while the questions and their comments don't appear to be read that attentively.

I'd like to see bad MSO reviews treated the same as regular reviews on SO. I'm not sure if MSO has review audits (probably not?), but for egregiously poor reviews, perhaps a moderator flag would be appropriate.

But there's a potential problem: I don't know what the penalties are for casting bad close votes on main. Is there a penalty? Should there be a penalty? That's why close voting is a reputation-locked privilege and also why other users can undo actions they don't think should have happened. As far as I know, it takes quite a bit before a bunch of dubious close votes gets to the point of "abuse" for suspensions. So the rest of meta will just have to stop sitting on their hands and vote more frequently. Upvotes on discussions that are well-formed and not obviously duplicates will help cut the number of unwarranted close votes.


My preferred solution:

I think more community involvement (especially editing) would clear up a lot of these cases. Even upvotes can help convince other users that a post is worth their time. Then maybe we'll see fewer bad close votes. Many of the examples you point to started out rather unclear and close-worthy. It's hard to tell from the timelines how many close votes accumulated while they were still bad. So it's entirely possible that only 7 of those close votes are dubious instead of all 35. Again, let me emphasize that the meta questions that got the best edits were reopened after clarifying edits and comment discussion.

TL;DR

We as a (meta) community should pay more attention to closing things on meta, but it's not currently a bad problem because others are willing to edit and reopen truly on-topic questions.

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    "If they think a close reason fits, they are free to apply a close vote to express that." - aren't people supposed to get review-banned for making bad close vote decisions in the review queue? It seems to me like there's a duty to make voting decisions that actually make sense, rather than just slapping "cannot reproduce" votes on posts that aren't even bug reports. Oct 20, 2016 at 17:21
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    "many of them did ultimately get reopened. That means the system is working." This sounds like it is the normal way for questions, being closed then reopened... Reopening should be a safety bar, the questions shouldn't have been closed... Mistakes happen, we all know that, but when too many mistakes are made, it is worth asking why are there too many mistakes... Oct 20, 2016 at 17:28
  • @user2357112 at the time this post was originally written, the question did not contain allegations of bad MSO reviews. It was just a (seemingly random) collection of stuff. I could have just as easily found a similar set of properly closed/deleted MSO questions. I'll try to address that in a later edit.
    – ryanyuyu
    Oct 20, 2016 at 18:07
  • The "system" only works because most people currently agree with the principles it is meant to enforce. Not discussing bad decisions because they are supposedly "not a problem" opens the doors for the principles to be abandoned in a longer time scale. In the "real world", the system is inhabited by people, people create culture, and culture evolves over time.
    – duplode
    Oct 20, 2016 at 19:55
  • @duplode what makes you think we aren't discussing this problem? My input to this discussion is that it's not a big problem. Downvote if you disagree, but my answer is most definitely discussing the problem. I even say as much "A small clique (if it exists) is not going to determine what meta discusses without the agreement of everyone else on meta. Your question here is proof of that."
    – ryanyuyu
    Oct 20, 2016 at 19:57
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    @ryanyuyu There are many ways of discussing something. In my opinion, the "the system is working, nothing to see here, move along" attitude is a dangerous one, as well as, in extreme cases, a tool for shutting down debate.
    – duplode
    Oct 20, 2016 at 20:06
  • Especially in the context of new users, I'd have to agree with duplode. Once a person has an investment in the ecosystem, and has gained visibility into how things "tend to work," that becomes okay (although non-ideal). But, new users already need thick skin to survive the barrage of downvotes (which new users are more likely to deserve) and terse explanations. The question on my mind is, How many quality developers just walk away?
    – jpaugh
    Oct 20, 2016 at 20:31
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    @jpaugh if you really want people to "survive a barrage of downvotes" edit their post to a good state and then start upvoting. I think this is much more effective that saying "potential downvoters should think twice." Anything you can't edit probably should be downvoted for being malformed and unclear. I think we should attack the problem at the root, which is a pattern of bad meta posts that attract downvotes because of their presentation even if their content is worth an upvote.
    – ryanyuyu
    Oct 20, 2016 at 20:43
  • @ryanyuyu. I did not mean to imply that downvotes ought to be withheld; (but I do think the first downvoter should take time to leave a courteous explanations of the downvotes.) My main point was that being a new user is hard enough already.
    – jpaugh
    Oct 20, 2016 at 20:47
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    Even simple discourtesy can seem like malicious intent over the internet: when the truth is far simpler: many of the people who care about the sites are spread too thinly to consider courtesy a worthwhile use of time.
    – jpaugh
    Oct 20, 2016 at 20:50
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    Fair enough. I'd just like to see less apathy.
    – ryanyuyu
    Oct 20, 2016 at 20:59

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