Ask HN: Could downvoting work better if a reason had to be entered?
The ability to provide meaningful and respectful feedback is as important as someone who may provoke or try to stir trouble.
I'm curious if YC has toyed with the idea of increasing the right to downvote to have to include a comment, explanation, or reasoning that is not a few characters.
16 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 42.6 ms ] threadMaybe it could work if there were pre-determined answers one could select (so it's faster) but I don't see how the simple UI could display that.
Food for thought: should upvotes require a reason too?
I don't think people mind being wrong.
Or maybe people like pointing out others are wrong more than sticking around for the conversation.
We do know the quality and diversity of opinion and conversation doesn't suffer from upvoting, but it can be suppressd by downvoting.
If downvoting had a requirement of a one sentence input, that was maybe anonymized or made only visible to the OP... maybe there's something there.
How many downvotes wouldn't happen if it wasn't quite bad enough to articulate into one sentence?
Adding a reason wouldn't help.
Your comment reminded me of Polis:
https://pol.is/ https://github.com/pol-is/
Taiwan use it for their multi-stakeholder decision making to find points of agreement. Their application of it to the Uber vs Taxis situation was quite interesting.
https://debconf18.debconf.org/talks/135-q-a-session-with-min... https://blog.pol.is/pol-is-in-taiwan-da7570d372b5 https://blog.pol.is/uber-responds-to-vtaiwans-coherent-blend...
HN is not Reddit though. The maximum downvote count is 5 reducing a comment to a score of -4 and aside from the color fading of negativity scored comments vote counts are not published. The majority of users and discussions are also generally superior to those of Reddit as well.
Even with that said problematic discussions do happen on HN even if far more rarely. The reason for the problematic behavior, as many people clearly identify, is people looking for agreement more than discussion or insight. In this case people on HN engaging conversations only for agreement are generally eager to advertise their censoring foolishness and insecurity.
Aside from contrived political discussions downvotes are generally reserved for comments that are far off topic or impose violating behavior.
Either way the biggest change this would result is visibly associating a user to their down vote. Otherwise, I don’t see this having a dramatic impact on HN. This would have a huge impact at Reddit though.
Echo chambers are exactly the thing to avoid, both up and downvoting.
We know that downvoting will suppress activity more than upvoting.
The downvoting limit to -4 is a new to me so thanks for sharing that.
Perhaps the downvote reason could be published anonymously to the original poster and doesn't have to be public... or that could be optional.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20864278
An excerpt:
> The counterargument is that, just as with downvote-reason-giving, downvote-reason-reviewing would be dominated by the same forces as downvoting in the first place. You wouldn't get more signal, just more complexity, plus a lot more work—both because of the reviewing itself, and because of meta-quarrels about reasons and reason-reviews.
There's been a lot of comments and other Ask HNs on this and related topics in the past. The search box can at the bottom of the page can help you find some of this.
Part of me wonders if it would be an expensive temporary experiment instead of trying to imagine it.
Oftentimes these are in conflict. Do I upvote a comment that IMO presents dangerous thoughts built on false assumptions and flawed reasoning, but that has a solid dismissal and spawns a great and honest conversation subthread? When we see highly voted and opinionated comments, I think we all generally believe this is because most voters agreed with the sentiment. I have no issues downvoting useless comments I disagree with, but these are tricky. There are other situations when the mixing signals become an issue.
I've been brooding on how a more multi-faceted voting system would work - how many dimensions are there, how are they presented and how do they affect thread rendering? What's the right balance and how specific should it be for different communities (think subreddits)? My hunch is that 1 (status quo) is too little and 5 too many.
There are a lot of topics that people passionately argue in which they are not expert and it’s disheartening. It’s News for Nerds but we can be a fickle bunch. I think the posts that are tech go better than others.