An open chat. Recent comments on the right —>

  • DessalinesOPMA
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    15
    ·
    5 years ago

    Lemmy Instances can disable downvotes (I added this a while back), but I personally really like downvotes.

    FB, twitter, youtube, all either don’t have them, or removed them, with reddit one of the last sites willing to keep a dislike action.

    But also, why does a downvote need an explanation, but an upvote doesn’t? If someone doesn’t want to tell you why they like / dislike your comment, they shouldn’t have to.

    • testuser1
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      5
      ·
      5 years ago

      But also, why does a downvote need an explanation, but an upvote doesn’t?

      Because the downvote is for me like criticism. Something is obviously wrong with the thing and i want to know why. I want to learn from it and understand whether i should adapt my behavior or not. And this decision is only possible when i know the reason for every downvote.

      Also, because upvotes are harder to explain. Usually there all something like “interesting, hand’t thought about this before”. When you have 20 upvotes, they are probably all very similar.

      However, for downvotes it is different. You can downvote things because of:

      • factual errors (for instance when some number is relevant but wrong. -> I want to know which number is wrong and the source.)
      • missing contextual information (article is negative on topic X, but after knowing Y, it is not that negative anymore and understandable. --> I want to know that.)
      • information is correct, but because of bias/stereotypes, the person downvotes. The information in the article explains these things, but the person is too lazy to read that and downvotes before reading. I want to know that so i can ignore the downvote.

      etc. So many different reasons to downvote. All of them are important to me.

      For me downvotes are a feedback system. So i can differentiate good articles from ones with errors.

      If someone doesn’t want to tell you why they like / dislike your comment, they shouldn’t have to.

      But what should i do with this feedback? What if its because of bias, stereotypes? and the person is not interested in participating in the debate?

      • radarsat1
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        7
        ·
        5 years ago

        i find something that makes online discussions more fun and less frustrating is to learn to just accept the downvotes… sometimes they make you want to lash out and say, “hey wtf did i say, do you not agree? if not why not!?” but at the end of the day… just relax… they are just internet points… it’s a lot more relaxing to just see the number, and say to yourself… “damn… guess i misstepped on that one somehow… oh well”… and just move on. like the above poster says, no one actually owes you an explanation, after all. just remember that downvotes are part of the game, they are going to happen, and try not to let it get to you.

        also, i’ll add, sometimes you want to own those downvotes… sometimes it’s okay to have a dissenting opinion, and you should learn to role with that. “20 downvotes, i hit a nerve I guess, but fuck it I’m right and I’m sticking with what i said.” I feel like going out after a bad-ass comment and asking for downvote explanations just takes away from any solid position you were trying to take.

        • Maya
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          9
          ·
          5 years ago

          shout out to lemmy for not having aggregate comment karma

          • 777
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            5
            ·
            4 years ago

            Slashdot has (had? haven’t been there in a long time) a system in which you can upvote/downvote but also assign a reason, i.e. it’s funny, insightful, off-topic, spam. Perhaps it could be taken further so you could upvote a good comment but also signal you disagree with it somehow - this is especially helpful in political discussions as I don’t like to disrespect people I disagree with who are debating in good faith.

    • testuser1
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      5 years ago

      also, imagine a big discussion. Where people write 50 words and one responds with “I disagree.” and responds to explain why one detail is wrong.

      This is easy to be missunderstood as “all/most of those 50words are wrong”. So i like the force to explain downvotes as separation between criticism and aggreeing stuff.

      When debates get heated, people will forget that. They will forget to cite at all. They will downvote like hell. And all that makes debating culture difficult.

      And i can tell from personal experience, that people do not explain their downvotes. You have to ask and even then, only some answer.

      With that, i can tell you: the current way won’t lead to constructive learning, where people understand each other.