I didn’t downvote it, but doing so doesn’t seem unreasonable to me: Julian’s comment obviously wasn’t serious, and it’s hard to see how taking it seriously could be worth while.
(In particular, I think those who have concluded that you’re being downvoted willy-nilly because people think you’re a troll and want to punish you are going beyond the evidence, unless they have other reasons.)
If by “the above-quoted comment” you mean “I’d love to know [...]”: I see no evidence that that has had three downvotes, nor did I make any comment on its merit (it was its grandparent that I commented on), and I therefore have no idea why you’d be asking me that question.
If you mean the one that begins “Taking that as a serious comment”: one obvious alternative hypothesis is that three people thought something like “What a silly response: obviously Julian didn’t mean what he said seriously, and taking it seriously neither advances any interesting conversation, nor adds humour of its own. It’s therefore an instance either of bad thinking or bad judgement or both, and it is not the sort of thing I want to see more of here on Less Wrong.”
If by “the above-quoted comment” you mean “I’d love to know [...]”:
Yup.
I see no evidence that that has had three downvotes...
The evidence is gone now, but it did have a score of −2 when I wrote my first comment on this thread.
nor did I make any comment on its merit (it was its grandparent that I commented on), and I therefore have no idea why you’d be asking me that question.
Ah, I see. When you wrote that you thought I was going beyond the available evidence, you weren’t referring to the score of the “I’d love to know [...]” comment. I was referring to it, and I thought you were too.
If you mean the one that begins “Taking that as a serious comment”: [etc.]
I think the root of our misunderstanding is that in the sequence
Annoyance: blah blah blah
Annoyance: blah blah the above comment blah blah
you: blah blah the above comment blah blah
I took your “the above comment” to refer to Annoyance’s first comment (the same one as he meant when he used the same phrase) whereas you were referring to his second (the one you were replying to).
For what it’s worth, I have an alternative hypothesis for the downvotes on Annoyance’s second comment too (though not as compelling as the one I have for his first): at least three people hate it (here and on other sites like Reddit, Hacker News, etc.) when people complain about getting downvoted, and perceived Annoyance’s second comment as a complaint. (That perception may have been influenced by other interactions with Annoyance, but that’s not the same thing as punishing him for those other interactions.)
That perception may have been influenced by other interactions with Annoyance, but that’s not the same thing as punishing him for those other interactions.
I will confess to a certain degree of, pun unintended, annoyance with some of his previous comments. However, it seems to me that downvoting the comment in question (the second one, about downvotes) is unfair. Given that a downvote conveys very little information in itself, requesting additional feedback on the reason for a downvote ought to be perfectly acceptable as a method of interpreting the feedback.
I think the voting system would benefit from one or more of a few modifications:
Limiting downvotes per user, to restrict grudge downvotes
Allowing downvotes only on comments you’ve replied to (no downvote without an reason, in other words)
Enforce a social standard that requesting clarification on downvotes is acceptable
Replace voting with a sliding scale of quality instead of up/down, and for every user who has previously voted on a comment that views a thread, treat that as a vote for 50%/average/&c.
I have voiced my disagreement with this elsewhere, but I must reiterate that I am not in favor of restricting downvotes to comments you’ve replied to. Replying to a troll, for instance, is the wrong thing to do.
Also, that unnecessarily makes upvoting easier than downvoting. I happily downvote any comment that I think doesn’t add anything to the discussion at hand, and it already takes up too much of my time.
If limiting downvotes sounds reasonable, upvotes should be limited accordingly. And the automatic upvote to one’s own comments should be included under that limit. Though I’m altogether against such limits.
I have voiced my disagreement with this elsewhere, but I must reiterate that I am not in favor of restricting downvotes to comments you’ve replied to. Replying to a troll, for instance, is the wrong thing to do.
Good point. I retract that suggestion.
And the automatic upvote to one’s own comments should be included under that limit.
The automatic upvote to one’s own comments is slated to be removed, with the stated intent to normalize comment scores to a baseline of 0. There’s an issue entered in LW’s Google Code issue tracker for this already.
If the Internet has taught us nothing else, it’s taught us that there is no position or statement sufficiently ludicrous that no one will offer it seriously.
Item for item, I’ve gotten into more trouble dismissing contributions as meant trivially when they were meant seriously than vice versa. As a result, I assume people mean what they say unless any potential meaning stretches even an extended presumption of good sense.
Item for item, I’ve gotten into more trouble dismissing contributions as meant trivially when they were meant seriously than vice versa.
This is an understandable behavior, and I sympathize, but beware of overcompensating for it. Both mistakes are heavily penalized socially, for better or worse.
If you suspect, but are not certain, that something was meant humorously, consider replying in a way that can be interpreted either seriously or as carrying the joke further. Explicitly acknowledging either alternative is generally unwise.
Based on the fact that the above comment is at −2 right now, it looks like at least three people (or the person(s) owning three accounts, anyway) have decided to hammer every comment of yours they notice.
I’m not sure about the community norms for this situation. Are down votes meant for punishing perceived troll-ish comments, or for all comments by perceived trolls? (Let the record show that I personally think this treatment of you is an abuse of the karma system.)
I think you’re right about that. Since I don’t approve of voting on comments based solely on who posted them, I have gone through Annoyance’s post history and distributed blind up-votes, to counter one of the people who did the same with down-votes.
Perhaps there should be a limit to the number of times a user can vote a particular user’s comments in the same direction.
You’re combating what you perceive as insincere voting with insincere voting? Would it not be better to vote up those comments which you feel add to the site?
We could really do with a median-based voting system, like the one I proposed here.
“You’re combating what you perceive as insincere voting with insincere voting?”
It seems to me that people willing to vote insincerely will have a disproportionate effect, since it’s lots easier to vote yes or no willy-nilly than to only express yourself rarely after due deliberation.
I’d love to know why people voted the above comment down.
I didn’t downvote it, but doing so doesn’t seem unreasonable to me: Julian’s comment obviously wasn’t serious, and it’s hard to see how taking it seriously could be worth while.
(In particular, I think those who have concluded that you’re being downvoted willy-nilly because people think you’re a troll and want to punish you are going beyond the evidence, unless they have other reasons.)
Annoyance wrote:
gjm, what alternative hypothesis other than punishment would you propose to explain 3 down votes on the above-quoted comment?
If by “the above-quoted comment” you mean “I’d love to know [...]”: I see no evidence that that has had three downvotes, nor did I make any comment on its merit (it was its grandparent that I commented on), and I therefore have no idea why you’d be asking me that question.
If you mean the one that begins “Taking that as a serious comment”: one obvious alternative hypothesis is that three people thought something like “What a silly response: obviously Julian didn’t mean what he said seriously, and taking it seriously neither advances any interesting conversation, nor adds humour of its own. It’s therefore an instance either of bad thinking or bad judgement or both, and it is not the sort of thing I want to see more of here on Less Wrong.”
Yup.
The evidence is gone now, but it did have a score of −2 when I wrote my first comment on this thread.
Ah, I see. When you wrote that you thought I was going beyond the available evidence, you weren’t referring to the score of the “I’d love to know [...]” comment. I was referring to it, and I thought you were too.
I have no problem with any of that.
I think the root of our misunderstanding is that in the sequence
Annoyance: blah blah blah
Annoyance: blah blah the above comment blah blah
you: blah blah the above comment blah blah
I took your “the above comment” to refer to Annoyance’s first comment (the same one as he meant when he used the same phrase) whereas you were referring to his second (the one you were replying to).
For what it’s worth, I have an alternative hypothesis for the downvotes on Annoyance’s second comment too (though not as compelling as the one I have for his first): at least three people hate it (here and on other sites like Reddit, Hacker News, etc.) when people complain about getting downvoted, and perceived Annoyance’s second comment as a complaint. (That perception may have been influenced by other interactions with Annoyance, but that’s not the same thing as punishing him for those other interactions.)
That’s a reasonably plausible hypothesis—I’m glad I asked. This is my first experience with rated comments, so I wasn’t aware that was common.
A search for other people who have commented about receiving down votes turned up this thread. It seems karma-punishing is common too.
I will confess to a certain degree of, pun unintended, annoyance with some of his previous comments. However, it seems to me that downvoting the comment in question (the second one, about downvotes) is unfair. Given that a downvote conveys very little information in itself, requesting additional feedback on the reason for a downvote ought to be perfectly acceptable as a method of interpreting the feedback.
I think the voting system would benefit from one or more of a few modifications:
Limiting downvotes per user, to restrict grudge downvotes
Allowing downvotes only on comments you’ve replied to (no downvote without an reason, in other words)
Enforce a social standard that requesting clarification on downvotes is acceptable
Replace voting with a sliding scale of quality instead of up/down, and for every user who has previously voted on a comment that views a thread, treat that as a vote for 50%/average/&c.
I have voiced my disagreement with this elsewhere, but I must reiterate that I am not in favor of restricting downvotes to comments you’ve replied to. Replying to a troll, for instance, is the wrong thing to do.
Also, that unnecessarily makes upvoting easier than downvoting. I happily downvote any comment that I think doesn’t add anything to the discussion at hand, and it already takes up too much of my time.
If limiting downvotes sounds reasonable, upvotes should be limited accordingly. And the automatic upvote to one’s own comments should be included under that limit. Though I’m altogether against such limits.
Good point. I retract that suggestion.
The automatic upvote to one’s own comments is slated to be removed, with the stated intent to normalize comment scores to a baseline of 0. There’s an issue entered in LW’s Google Code issue tracker for this already.
“Julian’s comment obviously wasn’t serious”
If the Internet has taught us nothing else, it’s taught us that there is no position or statement sufficiently ludicrous that no one will offer it seriously.
Item for item, I’ve gotten into more trouble dismissing contributions as meant trivially when they were meant seriously than vice versa. As a result, I assume people mean what they say unless any potential meaning stretches even an extended presumption of good sense.
This is an understandable behavior, and I sympathize, but beware of overcompensating for it. Both mistakes are heavily penalized socially, for better or worse.
If you suspect, but are not certain, that something was meant humorously, consider replying in a way that can be interpreted either seriously or as carrying the joke further. Explicitly acknowledging either alternative is generally unwise.
Based on the fact that the above comment is at −2 right now, it looks like at least three people (or the person(s) owning three accounts, anyway) have decided to hammer every comment of yours they notice.
I’m not sure about the community norms for this situation. Are down votes meant for punishing perceived troll-ish comments, or for all comments by perceived trolls? (Let the record show that I personally think this treatment of you is an abuse of the karma system.)
I think you’re right about that. Since I don’t approve of voting on comments based solely on who posted them, I have gone through Annoyance’s post history and distributed blind up-votes, to counter one of the people who did the same with down-votes.
Perhaps there should be a limit to the number of times a user can vote a particular user’s comments in the same direction.
That does sound like 100% textbook classic “reversed stupidity”.
You’re combating what you perceive as insincere voting with insincere voting? Would it not be better to vote up those comments which you feel add to the site?
We could really do with a median-based voting system, like the one I proposed here.
“You’re combating what you perceive as insincere voting with insincere voting?”
It seems to me that people willing to vote insincerely will have a disproportionate effect, since it’s lots easier to vote yes or no willy-nilly than to only express yourself rarely after due deliberation.
I agree in general, and as an occasional python programmer I would consider implementing the idea in the LW code if the administrators like it.