Downvotes can be a useful tool to shape a community, but one of the main issues brought up in the post I made is when several people start downvoting communities they don’t even participate in. Which I want to emphasize is NOT the correct way for downvotes to be used.
First id like to start off with an apology to those who are upset about them being enabled. It may seem very clear to you that downvotes weren’t wanted, but as an admin I get complaints for basically every decision made on this site, so what the “right” choice is, is sometimes hard to determine.
I’ve been getting complaints about downvotes being disabled for awhile now, so it wasn’t clear to me. Even now, the opinion is still very split. Which is why I enabled them quietly to see if it would cause any issues. It did, so I made the initial post to see if people think the issues created by downvotes outweigh the benefits, and what peoples’ other opinions about them are.
This is my opinion based on what I’ve read and the results of the poll:
I think at a later time when lemmynsfw is larger, downvotes may be viable, especially if lemmy implements a custom home feed so that not everyone sees the same posts. This would help mitigate the issue of people not in communities downvoting posts. But as it stands I think the best option is disabling them again. Frequent posters, which are kind of needed for this site to survive, don’t seem to like them, and the poll is split almost 50/50. I have to try to balance enjoyability of posting and enjoyability of consuming content on the site, and it just seems like downvotes really hurts posters and only marginally helps consumers.
So with all that said, downvotes have been disabled again. Sorry for all the confusion and back and forth.
You could ask the devs to add a new admin feature that controls down votes per community with the option to (1) disable for the whole community or (2) enable for subscribers only or (3) enable for everyone.
speaking of ideas: what about being able to allow downvotes in the comment section?
if the twentieth idiot is asking the same stupid question in a community of lets say 100 active people, having the ability to downvote each instance of it, except the very first one, and then focussing ones argumentative powers there, for many to see is much more productive. since all the downvoted repeat-comments would at some point get hidden and not get a “false positive reaction” fron all the other “idiots”
Additionaly the downvoting of bad comments is a) not something someone would do from the Feed and
b) not something incredibly tiring to good posters
I was about to ask what exactly is the problem—is it the asking of the question or the spamming of the question? And if it is the spamming of the question, isn’t that already covered in ‘spam’? This seems very oddly specific.
That was what I wanted to ask—but then it got into stuff which begged the question from me subconsciously, what constitutes an idiot anyway… in this particular situation. And that was before we got into ‘false positive reaction’.
I don’t know… I merely trusted people to think on their own, and the ones who by chance refuse to think on their own get their dues too, while others wouldn’t be swayed due to thinking on their own. It seemed that simple to me… perhaps that doesn’t suffice for most? Interesting…
yes, I personally want to agree, freedom and smarts and such.
I’ll try to explain it to myself, as I’ve come to understand it, after watching the discourse in apropriate places, and you may listen:
I’ve been a lot on the internet again and I must say that all humans are stupid, depending on different contexts. And sometimes you’re not dealing with friendly people talking about trains and locomotives, but things with more of a personal touch, like watching porn, being trans, being religious, having a scientific view… and then suddenly you don’t have to only deal with some spam-bots that post everywhere, but horrible-asshat-people coming out of the woodwork and wanting to shit in your safe-space.
Imagine 20% of a population suddenly having to deal with a new thing, because the internet has shown it’s existance to them for the first time (like getting a huge reaction and getting to the front page of r**dit, or just in the all-tab on Lemmy).
The natural reaction would be fear, disgust, or even just asking some stupid questions. (which individually is fine, but having it happen ten times a day, under every post, is just too much (similar discussion with software-support and the RTFM-mantra.)) And thats just reasonable people, unreasonable people have macedonian bot-farms to spam your comments with helpful "I don’t like you"s or invite their online-only-friends over from discord to “own the libs” or something.
This is definitely something I’ve been considering, we’ve talked about different solutions like that
Or, frankly is you care so much, try to implement disabling downvotes only on the local filter which puts the top recent posts from among all communities of the instance. A real solution to the problem you have, however hard to implement… however putting downvotes again will only attract people who are here for the votes and tend to be toxic, won’t they? Why do the current posters still post, why is the general quality better than reddit, and why is the state of this instance relatively pristine in terms of acceptance. Why do you currently see comments that many have made this instance’s account their main account. But that is not my problem🤷 it seems downvotes will eventually come here and those problems will, as well.
My ability to downvote posts in a community should not depend on the mod of that community being ok with it. “This is my community, and I don’t want downvotes” would only be an acceptable attitude if seeing the community at all was opt-in, but it’s not. Everyone sees everything unless they’ve already blocked the community or user.
downvotes aren’t meant to be used as “I don’t like this entire community’s posts” if you don’t like a community, then block it, rather than downvoting a post that is in an appropriate community that the people subscribed to that community will like