This is the lowest-scoring answer on Stack Overflow
Were all the downvotes necessary, though? A downvote says, "Hey, this answer is low-quality, not useful, and/or wrong." 5 - 10 downvotes would've been enough to communicate the message clearly.
Once a post gathers a high number of downvotes, further downvotes have diminishing returns. The answer is already at the bottom of the list (sorting by votes), grayed-out, and interactive snippets are disabled. The author already understands that their answer is wrong. All that casting another downvote does is charge you 1 rep point and take 2 rep points from the post author. There's really no good reason to downvote answers past -10, or perhaps -25.
Should we refrain from downvoting answers that have a very low score?
Related: The "I Get It" Reputation Problem
TL;DR: Of course you should downvote bad answers, but is it overkill at some point? When the community downvotes an answer past a reasonable level (such as -10), it doesn't really help to increase quality and helpful information anymore. All that does is penalize the author with reputation loss.
But the question doesn't ask for system imposed limits, it asks "Should we refrain". Wouldn't you expect the SQL injection answer to have a lower score than someone that mistyped a function name, if they both have the same number of views? If all readers downvote both posts, regardless of score, this won't happen... – user000001
Views are the key. If Post A and Post B are equally bad, but Post A is viewed 10 times and Post B is viewed 100 times, Post B will have a score 10 times as low as Post A even though they're of the same quality.