I think this better reflects conflicting views on what voting is for. I don’t vote something down as punishment; I vote it down because I don’t think it’s interesting enough to belong at the top of the page.
If posting a certain kind of comments results in expected decrease in karma, people will avoid doing that, so there is an inseparable component of punishment. What you say would only work if there were two separate comment ratings, one for other readers, and one for the writer. Essentially, the hard/soft voting distinction developed to play this role.
I suppose that’s true if people would really take a decrease in karma as a reason not to post a comment. If people are doing that, they probably should be punished for it.
I think this better reflects conflicting views on what voting is for. I don’t vote something down as punishment; I vote it down because I don’t think it’s interesting enough to belong at the top of the page.
If posting a certain kind of comments results in expected decrease in karma, people will avoid doing that, so there is an inseparable component of punishment. What you say would only work if there were two separate comment ratings, one for other readers, and one for the writer. Essentially, the hard/soft voting distinction developed to play this role.
I suppose that’s true if people would really take a decrease in karma as a reason not to post a comment.
If people are doing that, they probably should be punished for it.
I’ll see about adding the ability to vote down comments that weren’t posted for not being posted.
My (somewhat limited) knowledge of Python suggests to me that this would not be an easy task; I daresay it might be nearly impossible.
But I agree—we should implement something like that if we can.
You are evil.
I have to know—in what sense did you mean this? “not morally good”? “deviously scheming to align the world with my preferences”? “hates paladins”?
For now, I’ll just take it as a compliment.