(This post is about the ongoing experiment regarding the display of a post's total score, discussed in New popup message when voting on a question/answer?, and not a duplicate of that thread)
May I kindly ask if you considered the ethics of deliberately lying to (some of) our users, when deciding to deploy the subject experiment?
I am certainly not the only one who sees the experiment as a kind of lying; quoting from the most upvoted answer to the thread above:
Questions like this:
[Screenshot of a delete-worthy question]
Really should be deleted ASAP [...] and basically lying to your readers about the question's actual vote count isn't helping.
and from some also highly upvoted relevant comments:
It feels like SO is lying to me
and
I absolutely cannot see the point of lying to your users about their downvotes. Or to other users either.
(emphasis mine in all above quotes)
Moreover, as explained by a moderator in the thread above:
You will only see this if you are logged into the site.
So, it would seem that we don't lie to "strangers", only to our own, dedicated, committed, and hard-working contributors, who are here trying to help?
I am perfectly aware that, as explained in the same answer:
You can see the real up/down vote counts at any time by clicking the score while viewing a post - even if you haven't earned the Established User privilege.
but this, I am afraid, can also be seen as "let's try to make the life of our dedicated contributors a little harder than already is", raising in itself also ethical considerations.
So, to wrap up:
- If you did indeed consider such ethical implications before deciding to deploy, please do share your conclusions with us here explicitly (arguably, the chat rooms is not the appropriate forum for such discussions)
- If not, I kindly suggest you terminate the experiment here and now on ethical grounds
From my side, I am temporarily suspending all voting & moderating activities until the experiment ends - or, alternatively, until I get a convincing argument as to why the experiment is not unethical.