On meta, there are many times where downvotes don't reflect that the question/answer is badly written, factually incorrect, or generally off-topic, but that there is some form of disagreement between the posters and the voters. Examples of this kind include:
- Feature requests that the voters don't think should be implemented
- Discussions where the community is split (half disagree with the other half)
- Discussions about a closed question where the majority believes should stay closed.
- Unpopular announcements by the admins/developers, for new features that voters don't like
- Posts that are argumentative and/or written under emotion
- Disagreement with the premise of the question
In my opinion, all these reasons indicate questions that are really on-topic on meta and often lead to very interesting and insightful discussions, but the current system prevents them from being featured on the sidebar as interesting.
The reason is that metric seems to use the net score (upvotes - downvotes) on the question and answers to determine if a question should be featured in the "Hot meta posts" list.
My proposal is to change the hotness algorithm on meta to use the metric (upvotes + downvotes), thus enabling broader discussion of the issues, even if there are valid downvotes on the question and/or the answers.
For cases where the downvotes are in line with the use on the main site, e.g. off-topic, unclear, spam, 1000th duplicate, etc, we have close votes and flags to keep them outside the sidebar.
Do you agree that these posts should also get a chance with the sidebar? Do you agree with the metric proposed in this post? Can you think of a better metric to prevent such posts from being marked as not interesting, and thus hidden from the sidebar?
To prevent cases where someone is downvoted to minus infinity because of the high number of views since the question is featured, the OP of the question should probably be able either to unfeature his question or to easily disassociate himself from the post.