this post was submitted on 19 Aug 2024
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I'm really skeptical about that. Either that they would do it or that such "justified" downvoting would be a clear cut or fair decision. Most people don't vote the right way. How many people downvote content they agree with or find funny but doesn't add to the discussion? How many people upvote content they disagree with that does add to the discussion?
And am I really going to take up a mod's time because someone got mad at me and downvoted—the most accessible and innocuous way to express displeasure with someone? How many more complaints about downvote bullying are mods going to have to field?
I don't know. You could be right, but I'd want to see it successful in a small scale, if possible, before deploying it everywhere. Maybe the folks suggesting it should be up to the server admin are right. That would be another differentiator and people could go to communities on servers that have their preferred visibility policy. That would serve as an A/B test and let people vote with their feet.
Again, this is only a problem because we have lost this sense of shared culture. If we really want to have an established "community", these guidelines will have to be one way or another be restored and enforced.
Here is an idea: instead of trying to remove power from people, let's give more of it. Hiding votes is hard, but creating a finer-grained permission system for moderation is not. Let's build a system where mods can assign other mods for specific types of reports. Then, we can have few mods who would be "all powerful" like they are now and we could have a bunch of "issue-specific" trusted users who could access/triage specific reports.
We shouldn't need mods to figure out what is "basic" spam and we shouldn't need powerful mods to say "user A is reporting that B has downvoted their last 5 posts in different conversations. This is a violation of the community rules and therefore should be banned."