We currently have two methods to indicate that a question should be improved or removed¹:
- Close votes: Non-anonymous, some feedback, independent from upvotes, can all be removed at once ("reopen"), fixed limit (5 users or 1 dupe hammer).
- Downvotes: Anonymous, no detailed feedback, offset by upvotes, cannot all be removed at once.
There are currently a lot of active discussions concerning these two methods, some of them proposing to take a feature from one of the two systems and add it to the other one, like revoking downvotes when a question is reopened, or adding a feedback option to downvotes:
- A Second Chance: Rework the Reopen System
- Can we make it more obvious to new users that downvotes are not insults and in fact can help them help themselves?
I thought about proposing to merge those two systems, but before I do that, I would like to understand what the advantages of the current system are. Is it just a historical artifact or a conscious design decision with a good reason behind it?
(Feel free to close this as a duplicate, if it has been asked before. The closest questions I could find are this one and that one, but they mostly agree that they are similar, explain the difference in actual usage, and do not explain the advantage these two systems have over a single, unified system.)
¹ duplicates being a special case