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I have recently started using Stack Exchange with active user accounts after lurking as a reader of Stack Overflow for many years. I am now able to upvote, and considering getting involved in my areas of interest.

My realization: after years as a reader, I have years of personal scripts and code projects with developer notes that I wrote in them like:

foo = bar(baz); # solved as per http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1234567/

My plan is to "pay back my debt" to old Stack Overflow askers and answerers by:

  1. searching my hard drives for useful Stack Overflow URLs and noting which were used to solve code problems, e.g.:
    grep -hiIoRs 'http://stackoverflow.*' .
  2. each day, dispensing most of my upvotes to those linked questions or answers (or both) that helped me in the past.
  3. Eventually got "caught up" after a few weeks(?)

In general, I wonder if anyone has ever done something similar. Specifically, I wonder if there are reasons not to do this:

  1. Are there public reasons not to do this? Is upvoting sets of years-inactive questions/answers ever considered harmful to public discussion or the community? (e.g. like necroposting?)

  2. Are there account reasons not to do this? Would systematically upvoting a list of disparate old answers/questions each day make my account look like a bot that should be suspended or blocked? (Are upvote-bots a thing?)

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    You should be fine. Do note that if you happen to upvote many posts by the same person, it could be rolled back as "serial voting". Nov 28, 2016 at 19:16
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    @Will -- yes, that is also true for new URLs in the future, but doesn't answer this question. I have been reading StackOverflow for years; I have been using a voting account for less than a week. This question is about whether / how to address those old useful URLs. Upvoting new ones seems fairly straightforward. Nov 28, 2016 at 20:29
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    Kudos for the whole setup: new user posting on meta in a clear way before doing something that might be problematic, attributing answers that helped you, and so on. Welcome to SO, and keep it up:) Nice to have you here. Nov 28, 2016 at 23:50
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    Your question is specifically about "allowed", so posting a comment, not an answer. Although your plan is awfully nice, I think there will be many answerers that won't mind at all if you skip it, more so because most answers you'd revisit are likely to have already received plenty of upvotes. Consider instead spending some time becoming an active asker or answerer: getting even more good content is worth more than extra upvotes :D
    – Jeroen
    Nov 29, 2016 at 7:28
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    @Jeroen -- Actually, an editor added the word "allowed" to my title. That narrowed my question a bit more than I intended. Thank you for the advice. Nov 29, 2016 at 7:31
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    I had a weird series of upvotes across a variety of my old answers spread out over a week or two some time back. I wonder if that was a similar situation? Nov 29, 2016 at 8:21
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    @KyleStrand Then it sounds more like you had a secret admirer. Especially if they liked your answers in knitting.stackexchange AND snuba.stackexchange.... Nov 29, 2016 at 8:27
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    Kudos for being one of the probably very few people that attribute code to SO, I don't think many know that technically it's a legal requirement!
    – DavidG
    Nov 29, 2016 at 13:15
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    Confused about why a question "can I upvote" would attract so many upvotes and such lengthy discussion. It is well-established that you can upvote anything you want, for any reason, at any time, absent fraudulent or malicious intent.
    – user663031
    Nov 29, 2016 at 13:32
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    This was originally called: "Advice: Pay back debt" etc. -- before an editor rename. I know that I can. The question is whether experienced people would recommend if I should. To use a related example, in many communities one can necropost but generally shouldn't. It isn't always true that "do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law." Since multiple commenters have been confused I'm adjust the post title from "Am I allowed" to "Should I" to make it more clear. Nov 29, 2016 at 15:50
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    @JeremyDouglass is this a research project of yours? ;-) I noticed that you are an Assistant Professor of English and your area of expertise could suggest something like this. Nov 29, 2016 at 21:24
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    @Mr.Radical -- Ha! Only in that everything I do is a research project -- in an extended sense. Nov 30, 2016 at 1:08
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    Very thoughtful of you to go back into the archives. Given the evolutionary nature of our industry I would be curious if when you revisit older questions if the answer that was "correct" when you used it in your code is still the "most correct" answer today. Nov 30, 2016 at 1:08
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    Good heavens! A sensible, thoughtful and articulated new user. SO isn't what it used to be 😂 Nov 30, 2016 at 9:31
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    Remember to vote up useful questions too, not only answers ;).
    – jjmontes
    Nov 30, 2016 at 14:21

5 Answers 5

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  1. Are there public reasons not to do this? Is upvoting sets of years-inactive questions ever considered harmful to public discussion or the community? (e.g. like necroposting?)

No, votes don't bump posts to the front page (like necroposting would do). The only person noticing the vote is the one receiving it. So that's not an issue.

  1. Are there account reasons not to do this? Would systematically upvoting a list of disparate old answers each day make my account look like a bot that should be suspended or blocked? (Are upvote-bots a thing?)

Upvoting many answers in a short timespan shouldn't be a problem. But be aware that it is discouraged to vote on too many posts of a single user, which would be detected as targeted "serial voting" and can be reverted, or even get you banned if the mods consider it as "voting fraud".

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There would only be an issue if the vast majority of the answers were from one or two users. Then your votes would become indistinguishable from sock-puppet upvotes.

However, if you are voting on other content at the same time, other answers on the same question that answer different aspects of the question for example, then there should be no danger of this.

It's good that you documented the answers that helped you and now you want to reward those answers.

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  • Please feel free to redact as needed. This thread was not created for sock puppet research. Nov 28, 2016 at 23:21
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    I m mostly concerned for the second paragraph of this answer, since "the exact mechanics are kept secret". I haven't seen this info anywhere else. If it is indeed common knowledge, ok.
    – user
    Nov 29, 2016 at 7:53
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    @Fermiparadox - I've asked the other SO moderators to take a look at this and no one has raised any concerns.
    – ChrisF Mod
    Nov 29, 2016 at 9:05
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One possible reason not to do quite as you've described is that the answers you used years ago may no longer be the best, even if they were at the time. While there's absolutely nothing wrong with doing lots of voting or with voting on old posts, I'd encourage you to look over all the answers before voting; seeing them all may change your mind about how to vote. It's surprising to me how often new, superior answers can be posted on a question that I thought had already been answered completely thoroughly, often pointing out nuances and flaws in existing answers that I'd never have noticed or thought of.

With that caveat in mind, go ahead.

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  • This is a helpful caution. Rather than just automatically banging in the votes, I'll also be watching out for things being closed / merged / updated. Nov 29, 2016 at 20:46
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    In most cases I still want to give upvotes to the answers that helped me personally, as that is the whole point -- unless there is a compelling reason that doing so would be spreading misinformation for future users. Still, I might want to handle the years-old comments (by last file edit) much more cautiously than the ones from the last few months.... Nov 29, 2016 at 20:52
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    Why not do this: if the answer that helped you personally isn't wrong, upvote; if there's ALSO a better answer that's been posted in the meantime, upvote that as well?
    – Soron
    Nov 30, 2016 at 0:49
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As others have pointed out, that in general, upvoting is encouraged, provided its done within the rules, to the point where you should receive the Vox Populi badge for maxing out your available votes.

As you are probably aware, you will also be limited to 40 question votes/ 30 answer votes per UTC day, so you'll need to achieve this over multiple days in chunks of ~30.

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  1. Whether the owner of the post is active or not, vote for the post not for its owner.
  2. Be careful of serial voting (sock-puppet)

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