What is "meta"? How does it work? - Help Center - Stack Overflow says:
Voting is different on meta.
Like normal Stack Exchange sites, Meta allows members to vote on questions and answers. For most posts, votes reflect the perceived usefulness: well-written, well-reasoned, well-researched posts tend to get more attention and more upvotes. Highly-voted and frequently-linked posts may become part of the community-curated FAQ or codified as part of the site’s Help pages.
Unlike normal Stack Exchange sites, Meta invites the community to discuss, debate and propose changes to the way the community itself behaves, as well as how the software itself works. On posts tagged feature-request, voting indicates agreement or disagreement with the proposed change rather than just the quality or usefulness of the post itself.
However, it seems that in reality, "opinion voting" is applicable to, and actually used in practice in virtually all cases, because every meta post effectively either proposes something or expresses an opinion, thus falls under what is called "feature request" in the help article (i.e. is an "invite" to "discuss, debate and propose changes to the way the community itself behaves"):
- discussion posts are effectively stating that something is an evident issue (and asks for feedback on which course we should take) or arguing that the community should take some general venue.
- voting is thus the community vote on whether this is actually an issue or a venue worth considering.
- voting on an answer to express this instead is not a good substitution because a "this is not a good idea" "default" answer is not an answer worth spending your time posting: it doesn't add anything to the discussion, voting is enough to say that.
- voting is thus the community vote on whether this is actually an issue or a venue worth considering.
- support posts are of a few kinds, but in all cases, there's still an opinion to judge at the core:
- "something has happened that I think is wrong"
- => vote on whether you agree it's wrong
- "some privileged action is needed"
- => vote on whether you agree it is needed
- "I want to be able to do X, please tell me how"
- => vote on whether you think X is a good idea/useful thing to do.
- "something has happened that I think is wrong"
Actually, given a meta site's topic, "opinion voting" is even equivalent to the "perceived usefulness: well-written, well-reasoned, well-researched posts" that the current text speaks of: a post is only "useful" for a meta site if the idea/proposition is good.
This was kinda obvious and self-evident for me. But it turns out that some people still don't get it, despite all the evidence.
So, I'm suggesting to reformulate https://stackoverflow.com/help/whats-meta to state that "opinion voting" is the default on meta sites rather than only applying in some select cases.
Since it's fundamentally equivalent to the current wording as shown above, all that the change would do is reflect the practice that is in effect anyway and clarify the matter: instead of two conflicting voting principles, there's now one, plain and simple.