This has to do with the public statistics regarding a user's total upvoting and downvoting count, which can be seen by any visitor in the Activity menu.

[![screenshot presenting an unmentioned user's total vote count. All-time: 3,605 up and 2,803 down; by type: 2,835 on questions and 3573 on answers; votes this month: 47; votes this week: 27; votes this day: 3][1]][1]

This feature request proposes to hide this section from other users. The reasons for doing this follow.

**It is not useful for moderation or curation purposes.** Detecting a pattern of fraudulent voting cannot be determined by the total number of votes cast. Whenever a form of targeted voting is investigated, moderators are known to rely on more informative patterns and to escalate to staff when needed. Any flag for moderator attention regarding suspicion of voting fraud should try to state their concerns and suspicions without mentioning these total counts.

**We generally agree that comments trying to make a point via the upvote/downvote ratio are not constructive.** Reference: [this Meta question](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/389009), asked from someone trying to understand the point of such a comment. By the answers presented, there is no controversy in the statement that these comments are something that we do not want to keep nor encourage.

**These numbers tend to create a stigma against users, more than they help educate them**. Curators who are likely to have cast a larger number of downvotes than upvotes are perceived as grumpy. Salty. Hostile. Psychopath. Or with troll tendencies. [Not my words, but they do happen.](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/393913/are-why-the-downvote-comments-ever-automatically-deleted#comment755367_393914) The opposite happens as well: non-curators who, from the point of view of some, argue that they could be downvoting more, and that their large number of upvotes vs downvotes is a disservice. And on Meta, this negative stigma seems to be more common than the number of opportunities to explain that these numbers depend on how they use the site, and may present themselves in a wide variety of patterns without being considered a problem of conduct. Quoting a comment from Makyen:

> From what I've seen in these comments, and elsewhere where people discuss upvote/downvote ratios, both the vast majority of people and the numbers which are often stated as "good", "bad", or "normal", are heavily biased towards the ideal the person who's presenting the number has for how the site should be used, rather than looking at it with the understanding that the way which they experience and use the site is not the same as how every other person experiences and uses the site. There is no one "right" or "good" ratio, or even a narrow range of ratios which are "good", or "bad".

As a consequence of this bias, **this information made public can discourage voting**, in a platform which definitely needs more voting. In particular, the visibility of these numbers has been mentioned as outright [discouraging downvoting](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/398621). Even if it's not for the sake of not having to explain the upvote/downvote ratio to a potential employer, the previous reasons still stand. As votes are anonymous by design, there is little to no reason for these statistics to be visible.

**This wouldn't be the first time public information about a user was hidden from public view**. The user's acceptance rate was eventually [taken out from the asker's user card](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/136951/lets-stop-displaying-a-users-accept-rate) because it was effectively counter-productive: it resulted in potential answerers deciding to walk away from questions that they could have answered, as well as in askers being pressured and harassed towards accepting answers just to increase this metric. Stack Overflow the company also [doesn't have an issue](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/410618/how-can-we-find-last-seen-and-profile-views-info-on-the-profile-page-now-tha) in [making unilateral changes](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/368285/some-changes-to-the-profile-while-we-make-it-responsive) to the user profile page, as well exhibited recently. And in this case, the visibility of the upvote/downvote ratio seems to be causing more harm than good.

**This doesn't stop people from sharing their own voting ratios.** And if absolutely necessary, an open catalog of voting ratios could be constructed, before or after this change, contributed by users choosing to volunteer with their own ratios at some point in time, thus keeping a source of possible patterns for educational purposes.

With these arguments, I would say that it is time for common users to no longer be able to see other users' total number of upvotes and downvotes cast, both on the main site and on Meta.

  [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/Hq0aG.png