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No, this is not another post to complain about downvotes. Downvotes (like upvotes) are the core of this site and need to be used in the right way.

This said, I am wondering if I am downvoting correctly. How efficient are my downvotes?

This may sounds like a philosophical question so let me first define what I mean by correctly downvoting or what's is a good downvote. For this we need to consider the overal votes and actions done on a post.

First, I will downvote a post based on its content (this is my personal thinking about the post being bad) then more actions will be done to that post and I consider my downvote to be good when:

  • The post is deleted (either by the owner or the community) which means that, in fact, it was a bad post.
  • The post will end with a negative score (at least -3) which means that at least two users agree with me and it's more likely to be a bad post.

But if a post will end with a positive score, I was probably wrong downvoting it.


My question: is there any way to calculate the number of my good downvotes? Is there a way to get the ratio good downvotes/all downvotes which will define the "effeciency"? I want to know if such data exist and if we are able to get them?

I first thought about SEDE, but since votes are anonymous I don't think I can get any information there. Checking the profile activity, there is a lot of numbers that may help, but I am not able to find the relation between them.

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Based on what we have in our profile, is there a way to get the information I am looking for? Or at least to approximate it? And what is the relation between all those numbers?

I think that getting the number of downvotes done on a posts with negative score may be tricky, but getting the number of downvotes made on deleted post can probably be easier (we may compare how many -1 we have versus how many downvotes we have done).


Is such information really useful?

Probably not but I am simply curious to know if I can get such information. It may help to get back to old downvotes and retract them in case the post is edited to be a good one which will increase the ratio.


The above doesn't imply that downvoting a post with a positive score is bad OR upvoting a post with a negative score is also bad. This is a personnal thinking about how I consider a downvote to be good and anyone can disagree with. I simply want to know if it's possible to gather the numbers I described. I am not aiming to discuss about how we should consider downvotes which is already done a lot of times.


UPDATE

As I suspected, this will be turned to debate about my reasoning which is not the purpose of this question. I am not against this and it's totally legitimate to disagree (or agree) with me and to have a different opinion but let's don't forget the main question: Is there a way to have those data and how do we interpret the numbers I found in my profile?

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    My guess is even with all the positive data about votes and voters, your results would be inconclusive, or if conclusive, suspect. You’re going to get a lot of conflation and noise arising from the pile-on effect. People feel more comfortable downvoting when they’ve seen others downvote first: even if you’re the first downvoted, you’ve significantly lowered the barrier to others downvoting after you. If voting were blind, this conflation would be eased. But it’s not, so it ain’t.
    – Dan Bron
    Nov 11, 2018 at 21:51
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    This seems a bit pointless if you don’t care if the results mean anything. I suspect you do want and intend for your results to mean something, but you don’t believe what I wrote above. But hey it’s your time, not mine. No, you can’t get this data from SEDE. You could scrape your own profile page and build up a dataset that way, over time. Or maybe the API can provide it. But again, I believe your results will not give you the conclusions you are saying you want.
    – Dan Bron
    Nov 11, 2018 at 21:58
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    I gave you what answer I had on that. Either scrape your profile over time (using your creds), or explore if the API is willing to give you some data. On the larger topic, I was only trying to save you some time and pain. As I said, it doesn’t effect me, and I’m certainly not going to stand in your way. Also, in case it matters to you, I didn’t downvote you, and I won’t.
    – Dan Bron
    Nov 11, 2018 at 22:08
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    Anybody having 10000 downs and only 1000 ups, should have long left the site, because he thinks it is full of crap. The only remaining possibility that he has an irresistible urge to do so many harm as it is possible.
    – peterh
    Nov 12, 2018 at 3:06
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    @peterh Under that theory, what technique would you recommend to distinguish between the cases “he thinks the site is full of crap (but he loves it and wants to see it thrive)” and “the site is full of crap (but he loves it and wants to see it thrive)”?
    – Dan Bron
    Nov 12, 2018 at 3:08
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    @DanBron Votes don't give an objective proof about the quality of the posts, they are only a rough signature, how the readers perceive them. Your cases are not disjunct, first is about the view of the voter, the second is about the objective quality. It might be an interesting philosophical question, if the second even exists. However, if an active voter has ten times more downs than ups, it is an objective proof that he thinks the site is full of crap.
    – peterh
    Nov 12, 2018 at 3:20
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    Side note: you are missing “significantly improved after downvote” case... Nov 12, 2018 at 3:59
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    "But if a post will end with a positive score, I was probably wrong downvoting it."... Oh really? So if we see a post with 10+ upvotes, no one should ever touch the downvote button on it, because it would be wrong to give it a -1?
    – Cœur
    Nov 12, 2018 at 6:54
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    @Cœur Reacting this Btw, in my opinion, a better system would be to make the downvotes stronger, but this 10000 down / 1000 up people should be affected by some special rule (for example, their downs could remain -2)
    – peterh
    Nov 12, 2018 at 7:55
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    "But if a post will end with a positive score, I was probably wrong downvoting it.| I don't get your reasoning there. Your statement is like "I do not got to elections, because a single vote cannot change the outcome, anyway". You should express your opinion, without looking at the other votes.
    – allo
    Nov 12, 2018 at 8:52
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    @peterh again, I know this, but check again the question and what I shared : In my profile there is a section saying I have done 3000 Downvotes so again what's is this number if the 10000 is the number of downvotes. Nov 12, 2018 at 9:59
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    @peterh it's within this question, not visible on my profile because it's only visible to me ... I shared different screenshot with different values Nov 12, 2018 at 10:03
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    @peterh and Temani, the reason for the discrepancy between the "10207 down" and "3878 votes cast" shown on the downvotes tab is that the latter does not include deleted posts. So Temani has cast 10207 downvotes and 7329 (72%) of those posts have then been deleted. This, by the way, to some degree vindicates at least 72% of Temani's downvotes, and highlights the wrongness of assuming that somebody is casting downvotes inappropriately just because they cast lots of them, without knowing anything about their browsing pattern and how they encounter the content they downvote.
    – Mark Amery
    Nov 12, 2018 at 12:49
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    By contrast to Temani, by the way, my numbers are 3473 and 5429 - i.e. 36% of posts I downvote get deleted - half as many as Temani. @peterh, the sort of crude statistic-driven analysis used in your first comment would suggest my ability to recognise low-quality content is thus drastically worse than Temani's, and maybe I am doing harm and should stop voting. I don't think that's true, and blame different usage patterns - for instance, targeting votes primarily at newly-posted close-worthy questions will yield a far higher deletion rate than downvoting old bad answers on popular questions.
    – Mark Amery
    Nov 12, 2018 at 12:59
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    You can get the information you want from a combination of using the SE API and scraping your profile pages for the questions which you have downvoted. To get a start on this there is the userscript Get a list of posts you've voted on that have been edited, which adds a tab in your profile with the posts you've downvoted that have been edited. You'll need to edit the userscript, but it already accesses the data you desire: the posts you've downvoted and requests data from the SE API about those posts, which will/can have the post's score/upvotes/downvotes/etc.
    – Makyen Mod
    Nov 13, 2018 at 8:08

2 Answers 2

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A partial answer: you can find out what proportion of downvotes you cast were on now-deleted posts by comparing the two different downvote counts in your profile. The public one, in the Votes Cast section, includes downvotes on deleted questions...

Screenshot of "Votes Cast" section, showing "5,429 down"

... whereas the one that only you can see, in the votes/downvote tab, shows only votes on non-deleted posts (a smaller number):

Screenshot of votes/downvote tab, showing "3473 Votes Cast"

By comparing these two numbers, you can calculate what proportion of posts you downvote get deleted. For instance, if I have 5429 downvotes and 3473 of those are on non-deleted posts, then 5429 - 3473 = 1956 of posts I've downvoted have been deleted, which is equal to 1956/5429 = 36% of my downvotes.

Of course, like many commenters on the question, I fundamentally disagree with the premise that only downvotes that ultimately result in deletion or a negative score are "good" downvotes. I don't spend much time in the trash fires that are the front page or the close vote review queue, but I do frequently downvote old, highly-upvoted content that I come across through Google and recognise to be incorrect even though many previous voters did not. That means my downvotes will surely have a low "efficiency" per the metric in the question, but I don't think it makes them less correct or less useful than they would be if I spent my time downvoting garbage questions from the CV queue.

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    I fundamentally disagree with the premise that only downvotes that ultimately result in deletion or a negative score are "good" downvotes. --> I myself disagree about this [I said this in the question as a small note]. I only used the term of good downvote for the purpose of this question to define the information I want to gather. Good/bad remains opinion based and no one can define what should be good and what should be bad Nov 12, 2018 at 13:19
  • Sometimes I find questions with 10 similar answers, where the answerers are regularly racing to formulate a popular, but false delusion more clearly. And then... I vote them all down. But it is rare. I simply can't find too much bad posts, because I am not looking for them. I am looking for an answer to my question, or I am looking for good quality, well-answerable questions. Both deserve up from me.
    – peterh
    Nov 12, 2018 at 13:23
  • "else is statement" Nice Nov 12, 2018 at 13:41
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit Yeah. The three titles visible in the screenshot all come from a recent (and uncharacteristic - I usually find it too soul-destroying) bout of reviewing. Two out of three titles being incomprehensible due to broken English is pretty representative of the quality level that one can expect from question titles in the Close Votes review queue, in my experience.
    – Mark Amery
    Nov 12, 2018 at 13:50
  • @MarkAmery I voluntarily surrendered my Close Votes review queue passport some time ago. Soul destroying indeed! Nov 12, 2018 at 14:02
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    @peterh and I am looking for bad posts to downvote them in order to make it easier for you to better find the good quality ones. So I am doing the cleaning job here and I will continue cleaning(downvoting/deleting/closing) as much as possible to get rid of all the crappy stuffs here. Nov 12, 2018 at 14:08
  • @TemaniAfif It would be a nice and an acceptable argument... if I could forget what happened to my this and this questions. Why is it that after many years of avid SE usage, I feel myself still deterred from asking questions. What did these wonderful "cleaners" think as they voted my these questions down... no, your argument is likely true in many cases, but I am sure, these cases are only a minority. I can imagine that you are not evil, but yes, most of the 1k up / 10k down guys, are evil.
    – peterh
    Nov 12, 2018 at 14:59
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    FWIW, @peterh, I share your sense that asking questions is an unfair minefield. I am far more liberal than most of the Meta crowd when it comes to what kinds of questions we should accept, and I've been reduced to despair on a few occasions trying in vain to save questions I felt were valuable from obliteration. I wish, in general, that we focused more on "is this question useful to future readers?" and less on "can this question be construed to violate one of our many vague and sometimes contradictory rules written in the Help Center or on Meta?". But I don't think vote count tells us much.
    – Mark Amery
    Nov 12, 2018 at 15:07
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit What you did? You simply stopped to make VtC reviews?
    – peterh
    Nov 12, 2018 at 15:38
  • @peterh That's right Nov 12, 2018 at 15:44
  • @TemaniAfif Your first comment on this answer seems to contradict what you say in the Question: But if a post will end with a positive score, I was probably wrong downvoting it. This is not necessarily true. Good/bad downvotes are not (very?) subjective because the site gives explicit instruction and guidance on when to upvote or downvote. (This isn't reddit or imgur, where you're intended to vote however you personally want to.)
    – Keith M
    Nov 12, 2018 at 19:01
  • @KeithM because I simply defined a set of data and I wasn't giving a universal definition about what is good or bad and I wasn't aiming to debate about it. 80% of people here aren't understanding the purpose of my question: I gave a context by defining few things in order to better explain the data I am looking for. It's like I told you a good person is a person who wake up early and a bad person is a person who wake up late then I need to know how many good person and bad peson we have. I need the data, I don't need to know if what I defined is accurate or has a meaning. Nov 12, 2018 at 19:12
  • @TemaniAfif Then you shouldn't call it "good" or "bad", but something else. The definitions of good and bad downvotes already exist; they're defined by the site.
    – Keith M
    Nov 12, 2018 at 19:14
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    @TemaniAfif In the future, might I suggest using terms "cromulent" and "uncromulent" instead of "good" and "bad"? Or some other opaque term that doesn't carry baggage? Nov 13, 2018 at 15:53
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    I'm at 37%, with 25k downvotes. good 'nuff
    – Kevin B
    Nov 13, 2018 at 19:24
5

To some degree there is no "right" or "wrong" voting. You vote however you think is right, and the collective voting result is what counts. In a democracy, not everyone needs to be of the same opinion. That's why everybody votes, not just one person. If you genuinely think something is worth downvoting, and a handful of others think the opposite, then the community as a whole has judged the post to be worthwhile, even if not every single individual member thought so.

And overall, that's a good thing. Not to politicise this, but both "sides" need to be in constant communication with each other to arrive at the best compromise for everyone. That's simply how this works.

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    Yes and no. Just like in politics, you should always consider if what you vote still makes sense and not just vote that way because you have done so in the past. Educate yourself! (And that's exactly what op is doing, right?)
    – DonQuiKong
    Nov 12, 2018 at 7:47
  • Yeah, again, both sides need to communicate. If standards have shifted, that must be worked out amongst the community. In fact, even without that, your voting behaviour probably drifts over time no matter what. You need to constantly reevaluate yourself to figure out whether you're still in harmony with the rest of the community, and why you mightn't be, and what should be done about it. That still means you cast every single vote according to your conscience in that moment.
    – deceze Mod
    Nov 12, 2018 at 7:56
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    That still means you cast every single vote according to your conscience in that moment this is what I do and at some level I don't care about the community votes BUT I described a situation in order to highlight some data and see if I am able to get them. Is simply gave some signification wording like good downvotes and efficiency to make it clear what I am looking for. I am simply curious to see if such data exists and also curious to know the meaning of the numbers in my profile because I am not able to understand them. Nov 12, 2018 at 8:39
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    Does not address the question asked. Nov 12, 2018 at 15:14
  • Just hoping to communicate that I don't really find anything of substance in this answer. There is a proper way to vote, which is based on content. This is not a democracy. Just because a post is upvoted doesn't make it correct or even worthwhile, even if a majority upvote it; there are plenty of highly upvoted deleted posts. There also should not be constant communication about voting. I mean, really, nothing here is "how this works", that's not how any of this works.
    – Travis J
    Nov 12, 2018 at 19:46

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