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Is there a way to understand downvoting?

I have a question opened about a year ago. This question (for some reason that I don't really understand) got downvote a few minutes ago.

To tell the truth - it looks like someone just trying to harm my reputation (I can't really think about other reason, as this question already got an upvote in the past).

I already checked multiple questions and answers here regarding this. Any comment will be appreciated.

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    Hardly think a single downvote (which would be 0.01% of your reputation) is an attempt to harm your reputation. Changes are more likely that someone just stumbled upon your question and felt it wasn't useful or wasn't clear. or didn't show research effort (that is what the tooltip on the downvote button says) Nov 6, 2016 at 18:20
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    And the meta affect piles in ... Nov 6, 2016 at 20:26
  • @DavidPostill well positive meta effect in my case - went to one of the OP's posts - it gave me some nice insight for what I am doing, so an upvote.
    – user6613600
    Nov 6, 2016 at 20:56
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    Tim lost his keys yet again?
    – gnat
    Nov 6, 2016 at 21:38
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    lol. Everyone gets the occasional random downvote.
    – Pekka
    Nov 6, 2016 at 22:27

1 Answer 1

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Is there a way to understand downvoting?

No, there is no way. There's a guideline for downvoting but I doubt more than 10% of the privileged users have read it. Everybody is free to downvote on posts as he/she wants, except when repeatedly targeting a user. A single downvote isn't going to hurt in the long run.

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