This is not a duplicate of the FAQ. Do not flag it as a duplicate of the FAQ. It is a response to and rebuttal of the FAQ.
SO should augment downvotes with an optional specific actionable feedback to the question or answer author**, like the ones at https://idownvotedbecau.se/
The list of reasons on idownvotedbecau.se, created specifically for Stack Overflow is:
Being unresponsive
Image of an exception
Images of code
It's not working
No attempt
No code
No debugging
Missing exception details
No MCVE
No research
Too much code
Too much information
Unclear what you're asking
Unreadable code
Wrong language
This list is far from definitive or final, and up for debate.
Each of these reasons links to a long-form post (example) that explains in detail what it means and what you can do about it. I propose adopting this format (if not this exact list of reasons).
I'm going to take a multiselect (not a dropdown) that users are encouraged to select at least one option from when downvoting as a proposed solution, and refute the arguments against it in the FAQ point-by-point.
I whipped up an example of what it could look like:
Below, a response and attempted rebuttal to the points made in the canonical FAQ about the subject.
Downvotes are, first and foremost, a content rating system.
They are an overly simplistic rating system. Requiring a specific rating (unclear, incomplete, off-topic, etc.) would improve the quality of the rating system. A simple linear scale is not a good fit for "question quality" or "answer quality", when there are so many different ways a question can be "good" or "bad". A question might be outstandingly good in one way (thorough, well-written) and catastrophically bad in another (provides harmful advice and false information). A simple good/bad rating does not capture that.
In the vast majority of cases, nothing needs to be clarified. The tooltip on the downvote arrow already explains what a downvote means, and it is specific for questions and answers. In most cases, the "comment" in the tooltip already adequately explains the logic behind the downvote, so an additional comment would just be wasted effort and noise.
This entire paragraph is false. "This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful" does not explain what a downvote means, and is not specific, because it gives three possible explanations and does not specify which (if any) apply. "This answer is not useful" is again completely nonspecific. Neither message "adequately explains the logic behind the downvote", because neither message adequately explains what is wrong with the question or answer.
Any requirement could be trivially circumvented by entering gibberish or something nonconstructive like "this is bad". Detecting and stopping those who enter such stuff through moderation/administrative action is simply not feasible on a site with millions of users.
At worst, a user could pick an irrelevant reason. However, in that case, the author of the question/answer would be able to figure out that the feedback is irrelevant (and potentially challenge it). A downvote without explanation provides no information and cannot be challenged.
It may not feel that way to you at the moment, but downvoters are doing the site a service, and making voting more difficult would impede the site's most important quality-control tool. Voting is ad-hoc and frictionless by design! Voting separates good content from bad, and makes the good content more visible. This is essential for the platform to work, even if it sometimes feels mean. If a vote is in error—which can always happen—the expectation is that the "swarm intelligence" of future viewers will eventually correct the problem. A single vote is nothing, really. What matters is the sum of all votes, which is why we only display the aggregate score.
Selecting a reason is a trivial amount of friction. Actionable feedback also separates good content from bad, and helps authors create better content. The expectation that "the 'swarm intelligence' of future viewers will eventually correct the problem" may be correct on average but that doesn't help individual authors that get downvotes with no actionable feedback. Some of them will improve enough to become part of that "swarm intelligence" if given the chance. If simply rejected outright, they will most likely leave.
Scale. Stack Overflow gets some 12,000+ questions every day. Many of them are of poor quality or just not a good fit for the site. It is beyond human capability to respond to each one of those bad or misplaced questions with custom-tailored advice. It would drain too much time and energy from the unpaid volunteers who answer questions and help users.
Adding one additional click (or keyboard shortcut) on a multi-select when downvoting is not arduous. Each reason would have a link to a more detailed explanation of the reason in the help center, which would have the beneficial effect of directing the author of the question or answer to relevant information without the person rating the post having to write "custom-tailored advice".
If downvoting is made more difficult, then upvoting would need to be made correspondingly more difficult. The system uses downvotes and upvotes to filter out the "good" content from the "bad." If consequence-free downvoting is a problem, then, logically, consequence-free upvoting is, too, because it potentially marks low-quality content as "good".
Downvoting already carries a reputation penalty, but upvoting doesn't. "Consequence-free upvoting" without "consequence-free downvoting" is the status quo, which the FAQ is supposedly defending. Regardless, I have no objection to requiring upvotes to select reason(s) as well (well-written, comprehensive, shows research effort, contains minimal complete reproducible example, contains exactly what I needed to solve my problem, insightful, etc.), since that could provide authors with useful feedback about why and how their questions and answers are considered valuable by the community.
Documentation on how to ask a good question is made easily available for those willing to read it. Stack Overflow's rules are special and arcane, but it's not like there hasn't been a lot written on the topic; even our #1 user, Jon Skeet has written explanations on how to ask a good question. Similarly, we provide extensive guidance on how to answer questions.
True, but not relevant, because none of that provides an explanation as to why a particular question or answer was downvoted. What is a user who has read the documentation, but still gets downvoted without explanation to do?
Leaving a comment accompanying a downvote can lead to negative consequences, like revenge downvoting and even off-site harassment.
Ratings, like votes, would still be anonymous.
Stack Overflow (the community, and the company) is actually doing a hell of a lot to make the place feel more friendly. The past few years have seen tons of discussions, initiatives, UI changes, help center updates and renovations, experiments like mentoring, and more—all aimed at making starting out at Stack Overflow a more pleasant experience without compromising on quality. Actually, a lot of veteran users feel that the sites' owners are putting too much emphasis on making the site feel nice, for the sake of traffic (which translates into money) over quality. Regardless of whether they're right or not, it is not accurate to say nothing is being done. It's just a really tough problem.
True, but not relevant. Saying a lot has been done is far from a reason to stop making improvements.
We can't accommodate everyone. There will always be more question-askers out there than there are competent answerers. You can't overburden the latter by allowing a huge quantity of bad or badly-fitting questions into the system—you'd destroy the entire system, and hence prevent any questions from getting answered. Not getting to ask your question on SO isn't a death sentence; many SO veterans have questions every day that they don't pose on Stack Overflow because they know they wouldn't be a good fit under the current model. The resources those veterans turn to to solve their problems are usually open to everyone on the Internet - they just take time, effort, and sometimes periods of frustration to understand. There are also other, more mentoring-oriented resources to turn to.
It is true no site can accommodate everyone. That doesn't mean you shouldn't try to make improvements to accommodate people better. Requiring slightly more granular feedback is not going to "destroy the entire system". https://www.thoughtco.com/slippery-slope-logical-fallacy-1692105
Using the heavy load on moderators and high-rep users due to SO's inadequate moderation tools and feedback systems to justify not improving SO's moderation tools and feedback systems is counterproductive.
Note: This question was incorrectly flagged as a duplicate of the FAQ. It is not a duplicate, but a response to the assertions in the FAQ. Creating a new question is the only way to respond to a FAQ.
2nd Note: It appears there is a similar feature request, Up and down vote tags (reason categories) for the OP to improve their post which the author of this feature request was not aware of at the time, did not get much attention when it was originally posted, and this feature request might be a duplicate of.