tl;dr
Specific advice was given by the moderator team (as a whole, anonymously).
When that advice was subsequently followed, a specific moderator's action explicitly undid it on a specific post, and explicitly blocked me from restoring it.
Context:
Update, for clarification:
- The following applies solely to answers with a negative vote tally, i.e. with a score of
-1
or lower, as I believe this to be a crucial threshold with respect to whether future readers pay attention to an answer or not. - Any meta commentary should be removed once the vote tally has reached
0
, and that is indeed my MO.
- The following applies solely to answers with a negative vote tally, i.e. with a score of
I try to only post answers that (a) I believe to be helpful and (b) whose efficacy I've verified myself (if I can't do the latter, I'll say so).
A few of my answer have a negative vote tally either not accompanied by feedback as to why they may fall short or with no follow-up feedback after the initial feedback was addressed (whether via a comment and/or via amending the answer).
I've examined those answers, and have not found a problem - but I'm always happy to take in specific feedback.
In the absence of such, I assume the - assumed by me to be unwarranted - down-votes to be a disservice to the community: they send the wrong signal, potentially causing future readers miss out on helpful answer that they might disregard out of hand due to their negative score.
- If someone's tempted to think this is about reputation: it isn't; on the contrary: deleting down-voted answers actually recovers lost reputation points.
Knowing that users tend to disregard comments, I've tried to counteract the assumed-by-me-to-be-wrong signals with comments such as the following as part of the answer:
-
Note: Despite the down-vote, I think this answer offers effective solutions that work as advertised, while (hopefully) also being informative. Do tell us if it is not, so it can be fixed / improved.
If and when the vote tally has gone to
0
, I remove these comments.Note that the primary thrust of these comments is: I believe this answer works and may help future readers, while also remaining open to feedback to the contrary.
-
I understand that posting such comments as part of an answer is controversial, but here's my reasoning (which - to be clear - is not what this issue is about):
- Only answerers who firmly believe in the value of their answer would post such - very specific - meta commentary as part of their answer. Answerers who don't [care], wouldn't, as that would invite further down-votes.
After posting the above rationale in a comment, I received a message from the moderator team (such messages have no individual author; for those who have the necessarily privileges, they can view it, as well as my response, at https://stackoverflow.com/users/message/115320), which:
- (a) told me not to engage in speculation as to why a down-vote may have occurred (I am on board with that, and have stated so in my response).
- (b) specifically stated:
You may request feedback on posts in comments (e.g., "I would happily accept comments on any issues with this answer so that I may improve the answer to address the issues")
The incident:
After a regular user edited in-answer meta commentary of the above flavor out of one of my answers:
(a) I instead posted that meta commentary as a comment instead, as explicitly instructed by the message from the moderators.
(b) Also, given that this was not the first such incident, I posted a "meta meta" comment to said user, pointing out that such comments should be acceptable, as implied by the moderator message. (This specific comment did deserve to be removed, hopefully only after having been read by the recipient).
Note: I know that I am - inadvertently - inviting the meta effect by posting a link to a specific answer, but I encourage anyone following the link to only cast votes there - if any - based on an honest evaluation of the answer, grounded in subject-matter expertise.
Subsequently:
Both my comments were removed (I do not know by whom).
A moderator locked the post.
In short:
- Said instance of moderation directly violated the advice given by the moderator team.