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Comments on Let's make all downvotes public

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Let's make all downvotes public

+6
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One of the aggrevations Elsewhere were all the vandal and retribution downvotes. They never took the problem seriously. Now it's happening here. Andy was the latest target, twice, recently. I've also had this happen to me on other Codidact sites, like Outdoors.

All downvotes should be public

I have long felt this was the best way to address the problem and make votes honest, long before Codidact existed. I proposed this when Codidact was forming, but got the same tired arguments in response. Maybe this wouldn't fit with more touchy-feely sites, but we're engineers here. This would be a great place to give it a try.

Rebuttal to common excuses against open downvotes:

  • People will be afraid to say what they really mean.

    If you don't have enough conviction in your judgement that something is wrong, then it's not worth listening to in the first place. If this discourages some borderline downvotes, OK. Downvotes aren't for when you think it might be wrong. They are for when you're reasonably sure something is wrong, and are prepared to defend your point.

  • It will lead to retribution wars.

    No, it won't. With everything out in the open, everyone, including the mods, can see who's acting like a child. Users with throw-away accounts aren't going to care, but we already have that problem. Everyone else is going to be restrained by wanting to maintain a positive reputation (not the numerical kind).

    Of course I can't prove any of this, but neither can those who claim there will be retribution wars. Nobody knows for sure since it hasn't been tried. So let's try it and settle this issue. This EE site would be a great test case.

The advantages of public downvotes are:

  • More thought behind each vote.

    Since you are publicly saying "This is wrong, here is why...", you are putting your reputation on the line with each downvote. People are going to be more careful in claiming something is wrong.

  • Downvotes won't feel like insults.

    Right now, anyone can say "You're wrong", then run away and hide. That's sometimes used to mean, or feels like it means, You're an idiot.

    However, "I'm Joe Shmo, and you're wrong because ..." is no insult. It's a statement of fact that can be objectively evaluated. As engineers, we consider it a favor when someone points out a mistake because that gives us a chance to make the design better, and maybe learn something.

  • Downvoter's misconceptions can be addressed.

    The person claiming something is wrong can actually be wrong themselves. We've all done that, and we've all had it done to us. The best remedy is openness. An open discussion let's the crowd-mind pick apart and probably resolve the argument.

  • Vandals can't hide.

    This is of course the big one. Vandals enjoy poking at the system and watching what happens. They know what they are doing is against the rules. They feel comfortable breaking the rules because they are anonymous.

    Put another way, vadalism requires anonymity. When we take that away, vadalism will stop. Anyone downvoting for disingenuous reasons will be visible to everyone, including mods that can do something about it.

Proposed mechanism

Upvotes will continue to work as they do now. There doesn't seem to be a problem to solve here.

For the first downvote to a post, a special kind of downvote comment is created. The title is automatically generated, something like "Downvote: username". The user then must fill in some minimum characters in the comment body. This is intended to explain the reason for the downvote.

On subsequent downvotes, the user is given a choice to "sign on" to an existing downvote comment, or create a new one. We don't need five separate comments all saying "Diode D2 is backwards". Instead, we'd have five user names shown on a single comment.

This also makes it easier to clean up the comment and downvotes if the error is addressed. If the OP fixes the diode, for example, he can reply to the single comment and all five downvoters automatically get notified.

When a user retracts a downvote, their name is removed from the comment. When a mod deletes a downvote comment, all the downvotes are automatically retracted.

It's time to do something

I realize this will take some coding effort. Unfortunately web coding is not in my skillset, so I can't help with that. But I'm happy to work with this as a mod. There will probably be some kinks to work out once we get some actual results, and it will require additional mod vigilance.

Most of the arguments against doing this are theoretical. There will always be nay-sayers against trying anything new. However, we won't know whether something really works until we try it. This EE site is about the best test case there could be. I believe strongly that it will work well, and other sites will want this mechanism too. However, even if it fails miserably, we'll at least know that. Remember that the problems this is intended to solve are quite real. Let's not have hypothetical scenarios get in the way of evaluating solutions.


What should happen to existing downvotes once the functionality goes live?

Good question. I'd leave it up to the implementers if some ways are harder than others. Code probably needs to be run as a pass over the database once. It would be good to burden the volunteers doing the work as little as possible.

If all solutions were the same work, I'd prefer a single comment be generated for all existing downvotes to a post. This would have the "Downvote: user, user ..." title, with an empty body or a body indicating conversion from the old system.

Anyone who downvoted for the right reason (genuine belief that the post is wrong, badly written, or misleading) shouldn't have a problem being exposed. Those that downvoted for disingenuous reasons might not like it, but then they were the ones doing something wrong in the first place.

I just checked, and I have cast 27 downvotes (out of 325 total votes) on this site. I probably already left a comment for most of those downvotes. I would have no problem standing up and explaining any of them.

Per-category?

Another good point. I don't see a reason not to track who did all downvotes. However, votes have different meanings in different categories. On meta they can mean disagreement. Receiving downvotes on meta shouldn't effect your rep. But, if someone disagrees with an opinion on meta, they should be prepared to explain what they disagree with.

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5 comment threads

Codidact meta duplicate (4 comments)
"Downvotes aren't for when you think it might be wrong. They are for when you're reasonably sure some... (3 comments)
Meta rep (tangent) (3 comments)
Per-category? (1 comment)
What about existing downvotes? (1 comment)
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+3
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It seems to me like the goal of the proposed change is to fight vandalism. I am pretty certain that no online forum has found a way to stop trolls, simply because trolling is one of the ways people interact with people.

I also do not see such a critical need for it. You specifically mention the latest downvoted answer from Andy, and your experience on Outdoors. I actually went on that site to see what the problem there was, and it honestly seemed to me like the users there just did not agree with your viewpoint and let their downvotes reflect that. I would hardly call that "targeting".

Looking at the past posts here on EE Codidact, I cannot say that I see many questions or answers that are downvoted undeservedly. So, I cannot see a good basis for a suggestion that would require not only a change to the site rules, but also some development time.

As a final thought: downvotes are just that, downvotes. There will always be people that disagree with you, in personal and professional life. Making it harder for people to express that disagreement does not make it actually go away, but rather masks it, which is detrimental to the quality of discussion.

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As a final thought: downvotes are just that, downvotes. NOT TRUE. (1 comment)
Completely wrong, I have personally been the target of the troll (I think there is only one currently... (3 comments)
It's easy for you to say when you're not a target. (3 comments)
It's easy for you to say when you're not a target.
Olin Lathrop‭ wrote about 2 years ago

Vandals and retribution voters tend to hit only high-profile users, especially those that explain what they think is wrong with others' posts. In other words, responsible users will publicly explain problems, but then be targeted by anonymous retribution. That makes it less likely people will express honest disagreement.

Some posts are so purely factual that it's really hard to see what a legitimate downvote is for. For examples in Outdoors, see point 2 under User Problems at https://outdoors.codidact.com/posts/285028/285056#answer-285056. Even if some of those downvotes are legitimate, they don't do the site any good without an explanation of what is wrong.

We keep making excuses not to do this. I know a significant number of people are against this, so let's try it on just one site. The current system is broken, even if you haven't been a victim. EE would be a great test case.

Kranulis‭ wrote about 2 years ago

Olin Lathrop‭ I mean alright convince the staff to make it and let's see. I think it will result in hard feelings and lots of aggression, but hey, I guess we won't know without trying. I can just imagine someone writing 'Yea, I don't know, I just kinda disagree with this approach'. And then what? How long explanation would you have to give for the vote to be considered valid? Someone will say 'Hey, that is not enough to justify the downvote, take it back!' and then some back and forth will follow, probably including nasty language as it happens ever so often. Then admins will be involved, and they have to decide is the downvote appropriate or not, and who says they have the right answer? But ok, let's see.

Olin Lathrop‭ wrote about 2 years ago · edited about 2 years ago

Kranulis‭ I really don't think it will get to that in the vast majority of times. Any system will have its problems. Don't forget that the current system has substantial problems this is trying to solve. It's easy to get caught up in the potential downside, but forget the very real downside of the status quo.

As you say, let's try it and see.