To clarify voting: users have different vote strengths based on karma, and the ability to give a “strong” or “weak” vote. My own weak vote is worth two points, and my strong vote is worth 8. If you hover over a comment’s score, you can see how many people voted on it. (More info.)
I have two comments currently at +10, “I note that that study...” and “it will wash off over time...”. Both of them have only two votes, my own +2 vote and someone else’s +8. I’m curious myself why someone (or possibly two different people) thought these comments were worth a strong upvote. But they both have only one person voting for them other than my own default vote.
(For myself, I’ve upvoted the article, and philip_b’s “I have common cold...”, and have my own default votes. I initially downvoted your “I don’t think it is worth...” but retracted that vote after you edited. I’ve made no other votes in this thread currently.)
To clarify voting: users have different vote strengths based on karma, and the ability to give a “strong” or “weak” vote. My own weak vote is worth two points, and my strong vote is worth 8. If you hover over a comment’s score, you can see how many people voted on it. (More info.)
I have two comments currently at +10, “I note that that study...” and “it will wash off over time...”. Both of them have only two votes, my own +2 vote and someone else’s +8. I’m curious myself why someone (or possibly two different people) thought these comments were worth a strong upvote. But they both have only one person voting for them other than my own default vote.
(For myself, I’ve upvoted the article, and philip_b’s “I have common cold...”, and have my own default votes. I initially downvoted your “I don’t think it is worth...” but retracted that vote after you edited. I’ve made no other votes in this thread currently.)
Oh. I can’t hover, makes sense