My thought process
I downvote questions when I think they are not a worthy addition to the information we have already collected here.
When I look through new PHP questions I try to find questions I can answer. I open a new question and I ask myself "Is this question deserving my time and answer? Will people benefit by finding this question in the future?" If the answer is no, I downvote. I will then try to analyse if the question is even on-topic and vote to close if necessary. Then I move on to the next question.
I also downvote a lot of answers.
I downvote sloppy answers, with no explanation, with bugs/broken code, with poor formatting (if I can't fix it easily myself) or if the suggestion is not the best suggestion in my opinion. Sometimes I downvote answers that are just lazily copying the same thing for the hundredth time or are just pointing a simple typo; I don't find them useful.
I also try to downvote off-topic questions, and answers which are not really answers.
My research
The primary reason why people find Stack Overflow unwelcoming is because they do not understand its purpose. They think this is a place where they can ask a question about their problem and get personal help. People get offended that we do not offer this kind of personal help. See Why do some people hate Stack Overflow?
Hear me out. Plenty of people come here for the questions, not for the answers. They are interested in asking about their own problem, not searching through existing answers for the one that solves it. They want someone to solve the problem for them. It's frustrating for them when we tell them the question needs more details, focus, or debugging details. They take downvotes as personal offence. They want help with their problem and someone thinks their problem is not interesting/not a good fit for Stack Overflow. See What is bad about Stack Overflow?
People must understand that SO does not offer personal support. This comment from Reddit explains SO purpose well:
SO q&a's are ideal for asking questions about and giving answers on standard situations and problems, so that's why it has a higher bar to uphold and needs a tighter-knit (possibly sometimes outwardly hostile) community for posing these questions and answers.
What can be done about the perceived hostility?
According to Joel Spolsky all questions are welcome even if they are the millionth duplicate. See Strange and maddening rules
We decided that newbies had to be welcome. Nothing was too “beginner” to be a reasonable question on Stack Overflow… as long as you did some homework before asking the question.
One thing I’m very concerned about, as we try to educate the next generation of developers, and, importantly, get more diversity and inclusiveness in that new generation, is what obstacles we’re putting up for people as they try to learn programming. In many ways Stack Overflow’s specific rules for what is permitted and what is not are obstacles, but an even bigger problem is rudeness, snark, or condescension that newcomers often see.
We could restrict questions. We could filter out low-quality ones, but would it work? Is this what the company is willing to do? I doubt it. The system is not good at judging quality of all questions automatically. We need simple heuristics, but beyond that it is our job to rate the content being posted here... which is what we do using downvotes and upvotes.
Maybe the post score should be hidden from the question asker? Do they really need to see the score? If there is something that can be improved we will either close it, edit or post a helpful comment. Post score is not very helpful to the OP.
Joel claims that rude, snarky and condescending comments are a problem. In my opinion, they are a symptom of a problem. Question asker gets frustrated with the jumping score, because they do not understand what it means for them. They post a rude comment under the question demanding an explanation! Curators get annoyed by lack of research, details or overall low quality. This frustration also leads to impolite comments.
My suggestion
- Hide the question score from OP. At least for the first two days. Everyone else can see the question score, and the asker can see the score of the answers. Post score on answers is never hidden.
- Improve the onboarding process for new users. Don't make it easier for them to ask questions. If they want to ask a question they must put effort into it! We need the system to explain it to them, guide them through question asking tutorial, and make them confirm that they understood the quality guidelines.
- Give curators more power and better tools. We need a delete review queue, we need more votes, we need to stop being penalized for downvoting answers, we need improved review queues, and we need incentives for duplicate closures. We want to sieve through the content, but we should not feel restricted by the system in doing so, otherwise, we feel like we are not welcome to do so.
- We need better search tools. Google is not enough. Many people don't have access to Google and some don't use Google at all. Stack Overflow search is notoriously bad at bubbling up the useful relevant content in search results to the point that people ignore the duplicate search popup altogether and search in external search engines.