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Recently a number of questions which I have posted have been downvoted, frequently by a single vote.

This is a highly irregular pattern, and while it could be a series of legitimate votes, I strongly suspect this is an individual user (or perhaps several users) who are targeting my questions.

I have been on SO for 12 years and not observed this pattern of behavior before. This has happened to approximately 10 questions, or more, so it at least isn't likely to be explained by random statistics.

I also suspect this to be the case as I have had several unpleasant comments relating to my questions which have been offensive or otherwise unpleasant in a personal manner.

What should I do about this? Is there anything that I can do? Or is there nothing that can be done and the harassment is simply an unfortunate side effect of using an internet connected resource?

I am aware there is an automated system of some kind which is supposed to detect this pattern of behavior but I suspect it only finds downvotes which are placed against a user's questions in a short period of time, rather than over a period of several weeks.

Essentially I am seeking some advice about the situation. I don't particularly care what my reputation number is on the site, I am more interested in learning and sharing information than what my user "score" is, but if my suspicion is indeed correct it would at least be nice to know some advice about how to deal with it.


Edit: See below, screenshot taken 2023-09-05

This screenshot was taken 8 days after answering this question. It seems that my suspicions were indeed correct, and the voting pattern which I noticed was indeed out of the ordinary and I was right to be suspicious.

Serial voting reversed

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    I won't be easy to set a pattern here. The recent downvotes were also on recent questions, and some of the questions received more than one, so that cannot be the actions of a single agent. At least one question was a request for a library, making it off-topic. You might want to be more open to the possibility of your questions being perceived as not very useful.
    – E_net4
    Aug 28 at 10:12
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    If you get unpleasant comments, flag them. If there's a pattern of unpleasant comments from a single user, custom flag any post and explain the problem. Aug 28 at 10:26
  • The above linked question does not answer this one, because it asks about a "flood of downvotes in a short period of time". This is the polar opposite of what is being asked here, which is a small number of downvotes over an extended period of time. In this case several weeks Aug 28 at 10:57
  • maybe this is a better duplicate if the other one doesn't help (although it is linked in the comments to the answer so is available there): meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/308502/… Aug 28 at 11:07
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    The course of action would still be to flag for moderator attention, describing the situation in detail. Still, the advice I provided above stands. You have asked a large deal of questions the past few weeks, which might put in question how much research effort is being employed on each one of them. Question asking is not as easy as it was 10 years ago, for obvious reasons.
    – E_net4
    Aug 28 at 11:15
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    To be entirely frank, a user profile that starts with a bold "READ THE QUESTION" banner is a red flag for me. That suggests someone unwilling to consider that the problem may be an XY problem or that the planned approach to the problem makes no sense. Aug 28 at 11:32
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    @KarlKnechtel - Well.. the text immediately after the banner is something more askers ought to do. How many unclear posts would be clearer if more asker read what they posted instead of assuming its quality? This can be both a critique of lazy askers and overzealous curators who don't pay attention to details. Aug 28 at 13:50
  • @KarlKnechtel I put that there because it is repeatedly the case that questions are not read properly. Many users skim over them and assume they understand what is being asked, when in reality they interpret the question to be what they want it to be rather than what it actually is. Sometimes I even do this by skimming over something, and then only when I read it a second time I realize my assumptions were wrong. Aug 28 at 15:58
  • @KarlKnechtel This frequently results in downvoting or closevoting, and questions being tagged as duplicates, when in reality they bare no more than a vague resemblance to another question. Some questions are broader, some are more specific. Just because two questions have some area of overlap does not mean they are the same, for example... Aug 28 at 15:59
  • Yeah I don't think a nag message is going to change the way people are.
    – Gimby
    Aug 29 at 15:23
  • @FreelanceConsultant that's why dupe voters are @ pingable in comments. If you suspect a question was dupe closed incorrectly, you can always ping the person who did it to reconsider. Mistakes do happen. There's no need to jump directly to the user is being abusive or is clueless/careless.
    – Kevin B
    Aug 29 at 15:47

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