Constructive Update
While commenting other posts I have realized that community may achieve both securing ourselves from increasing of hating behavior and transforming downvotes into a constructive mechanism.
Only by achieving both these points can we encourage to downvote a lot of community members.
The key is to make downvoting having no publicity visible attributes.
The reasons and how it could work.
I noticed from comments that downvoting supporters aim:
- to improve content quality
- to prevent other users from lower-quality content
- ones want to focus efforts in their tag feed on a high quality question
Also it seems, among supporters there is an old consensus that downvotes are not aimed at helping authors to improve content.
Also I noticed that downvoting unsupporters aim:
- to keep the balance of community activities on a creative side, to avoid the increasing of expressing hide hate behavior via easy downvotes
- to keep new users welcoming and mitigate the risk of unclear criticism of their mistakes
- to do not destroy implicit searching effects, when fewer quality answers attract search traffic by the same kind fewer quality queries
Comparing these it is interesting that
- Unsupporters prefer to not affect authors by downvoting and supporters realise that authors are not the primary target for downvotes
- Supporters clearly eager to make their best for the community, but feel narrowed in their efforts because of the strict Code of Conduct and anti-hatering consensus.
- Supporters treat quality as a factor of usefulness, unsupporters point the quality is not only one such factor
If so, community could rethink and remodel the downvotes entity.
Currently downvotes are used as subordinate to entity content usefulness to measure it. In this aspect downvotes are totally duplicate the entity upvotes. It is mathematically clear that one such subordinate entity is enough to build the scale and measure usefulness , and construct above it any type of ranking mechanism.
On the other hand current discussion shows the second usage the entity downvotes, namely as subordinate to entity content quality to measure it.
This dual usage design leads all the problems.
Practically it can be solved via the following steps:
- Create new action button on Q and A to mark exactly low quality. This should be the same manner aggregative tool as downvoting now. The votes should be aggregated totally separately from upvotes without any comparison in GUI. Moreover, probably, it should be visible only to moderators or users with some level of privileges.
- There should be no such restrictions for low quality votes as for current downvotes.
- The downvote arrow should be eliminated forever from the GUI. The ranking mechanism should be adopted to [0-infinity) log-scale or with regularly rescaling.
Having this we can dramatically encourage ourselves to label exactly the low quality content. These efforts then can be used build large-scale datasets to train artificial tools for different tasks starting from matching and linking duplicates, suggesting fixes, interactive guidelines while posting to authors, etc.
And in the same time, there will be no undesirable consequences in increasing hating, subjectiveness and unwelcoming.
Initial thoughts
The wording of the question is absolutely manipulative, since the question asserts without any evidence that downvoting is a useful and necessary tool for the community and improving the quality of content.
On the example of ordinary social networks, it is clearly visible that Facebook, which offers a negative rating for content, is much more polarized and subject to hate than, for example, Instagram. Not to mention Stack Overflow! Of course, this is a subjective user's observation, however, it would be very right if the author of the question were to give us the results of such an objective study of social networks and their content rating systems before making statements about the extreme usefulness of the downwashing tool.
In my opinion, it is quite the opposite. The downvote tool by its nature contradicts both the key principles and the goals of the community to create an open, friendly resource, especially for new members, rich in community content.
Firstly, it is unreasonable that "poor-quality" questions and answers are not useful. So I was repeatedly helped by the answers left to questions with a negative rating. Questions with a negative rating and high marks for answers are regularly met. Not the most popular answers are regularly found useful. The secret is simple - users, including me, formulate "low-quality" search queries that are relevant to "low-quality" questions! If I’m not mistaken, then the Stack Overflow blog even had a post about this effect.
Further. Downvoting is an anonymous tool, and for this reason it is especially attractive to haters. Especially, if he/she begins to be encouraged or restrictions would be lifted.
The number of people who want to remove restrictions and the tonality of answers to this question gives me the impression that supporters of lifting restrictions do not like Stack Overflow. They are not happy with the content, and it is not convenient for them to use Stack Overflow. We need to understand the reasons of such dissatisfaction.
Otherwise, they are ready, under the slogan of improvement, to begin to destroy the "bad" content in their opinion.
However, those who wish to downgrade are completely unacceptable to strive to decide for other members of the community that the content is of poor quality and that the content is not needed by others.
A reasonable question: Why does someone think that they have the right to deprive me of any content that could help me tomorrow? On what basis will anyone censor the content?
Maybe on the contrary, it is precisely the one who constantly experiences difficulties in finding content useful to himself/herself that needs help? In new tools for searching, filtering, matching, recommendations, etc.
Further. Downvoting sets up a critical attitude and distracts participants from other forms of improving content: writing new questions, answers, editing, and setting flags. Downvoting is worth nothing in comparison with that. Actually, it is a surrogate, an imaginary feeling of participation in a common cause.
Therefore, the presence of participants exclusively engaged in downvoting is a serious signal to analyze why people spend hours of their time to downvote many thousands of answers. In general, it looks like an attempt to sweep the beach. Perhaps the efforts and energy of these participants should be redirected to some new constructive forms of activity. At least in the form of manual labeling of data with special flags, for subsequent consideration by search algorithms and composing datasets.