I know this will be a controversial suggestion, due to the side effects it will have, but I feel that it's time to have a discussion about this. Should the system automatically invalidate any vote cast by one user to another on their same IP address?
Everyone on Meta always seems to regard sock puppet operators or voting ring participants as some kind of master criminals, but in truth they are the absolute laziest people I have ever seen. Over the years, I have suspended hundreds if not thousands of people for voting fraud, and deleted way more sock puppets. In my experience, 99% of these puppets and 90+% of voting ring participants come from the same outward-facing IP address as their target. Many puppet operators don't even bother to give their accounts different names from their main account.
The number of people using Tor or even a different dynamic IP address for their puppets is vanishingly small. Most voting fraud is motivated by a desire to evade question bans, as can be seen by the fact that most of these people hit a question ban before employing a puppet to vote for them. Similarly, companies are training their employees to form voting rings so that they can inundate the site with questions in order to farm out their work. All of these people do the bare minimum amount of work in running these puppets and rings, and don't bother to hide their origin.
I don't care about fraudulent unicorn points that people are accumulating, but I do care about inflating votes on bad questions and answers and people evading question bans to dump trash on the site. Seeing stuff like this and this (as but two recent examples) be inflated by voting rings is incredibly irritating to me and to other regular members of the site.
The current vote invalidation system is extremely conservative, only chasing after rapid bursts of votes. It is trivial to work around, and only catches a small fraction of puppets and voting rings. The majority are hunted down and dealt with manually by moderators.
Therefore, I suggest tightening this system to invalidate any votes cast between one user on an IP address and another user on that same IP address (using the last active IP address for both at time of voting). This could be done when the script runs overnight. Doing so would immediately eliminate almost all voting fraud on the site, and I think it would have a dramatic impact in many areas. For example, at one point 30% of the top askers in the last 30 days in [android] got there via fraud (in a sweep through these yesterday, that number was "only" 15%).
Now, this will have some noticeable side effects for areas where a large number of people share a public IP address, such as in large companies or in certain countries. Coworkers who honestly come across a post by a legitimate expert at their company and vote for it based on quality will have that vote invalidated. How frequently this happens is unknown. An argument could be made that odds are anyone at your IP address at the time you're voting is most likely someone you know, and good intentions or no, it's hard for you to be impartial about their content.
Maybe a low threshold could be placed, such as only triggering the invalidation after the second one cast between two users on the same IP address. This would allow for incidental, one-time voting between coworkers while blocking larger-scale coordination.
I'm asking this on Meta.SO, because from talking with other site moderators, no other site experiences voting fraud at anywhere near the frequency we do. People don't depend on other sites to do their job like they do here, and that leads to desperate behavior you don't see elsewhere. These measures may only need to apply to this site, and not others in the network.
Implementing this would eliminate almost all voting fraud overnight. Because most voting fraud is related to question ban evasion, it would also put a dent in that problem as well. Fewer bad questions would be asked by people now unable to evade questions bans, companies and school groups wouldn't be able to coordinate votes for wrong answers and bad questions, and moderators wouldn't have to invest so much time in tracking down sock puppets and voting rings.