There is a pull request which adds a new setting show_downvotes with these settings:

  • Show (current behaviour)
  • Hide (all downvotes hidden in ui)
  • ShowForOthers (only downvotes on other user’s posts are visible)

Importantly the last option would become the new default, which means that users wont be aware that their post or comment was downvoted unless they manually change the setting. This may be good for mental health, but may also make it harder for users to realize that their content is unpopular. What do you think about it?

Here is the pull request

  • Echo Dot
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    11 hour ago

    Why? Most posts that I’ve seen that have been downvoteed are because the comment in question is bad in some way. People who don’t realise that need a lesson in been appropriate.

    What I would be in favor of, is downvotes been hidden to everyone to stop bandwagoning.

  • @Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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    11 hour ago

    I personally prefer way the things they are now (show downvotes). I’m not quite sure what the reasoning would be to hide downvotes on a user’s own posts?

  • @teagrrl@lemmy.ml
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    85 hours ago

    I have to say I really appreciate not seeing downvotes when I am on hexbear I think they got a good thing going on over there.

  • @kjaeselrek@lemmy.ml
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    147 hours ago

    I think it’s a neat option to have, but personally I would make it opt-in rather than opt-out

  • Dessalines
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    6 hours ago

    To elaborate on why I’d like to add this, from the original issue:

    This is to enable a user being able to still show downvotes for other people’s posts/comments, but hide downvotes to their own content.

    Adding this exception for your user alone, is to promote a positive experience, and for users to not have their mental well-being negatively affected by downvotes to their own content.

    To mitigate the mental health negatives of downvotes, many instances already have downvotes entirely removed (meaning not only are downvotes not shown, but its impossible to downvote anything).

    Disabling downvotes globally (not just for your user), has a lot of negatives, such as:

    • Highly negative / low score comments seem to still be upvoted, and so encourage twitter-style rage-bait engagement (instead of just downvoting and moving on).
    • These combative threads then keep getting bumped to the top of the active sort, making hostile comments seem the norm.
    • You don’t know which comments are actually unpopular or not, so like twitter, you have to “check the ratio”, of replies to upvotes, to see if something is actually unpopular.

    By making ShowForOthers default, we mitigate the downsides above, while also promoting positive mental health.

    Just to clarify:

    • This is not removing the ability to downvote.
    • This is only about adding a setting to hide downvotes to your own content.
    • Users can always re-enable showing downvotes to their own content at any time in their settings.
  • @golden_zealot@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    As others have said, I think it should be opt in instead of opt out, but it is probably good to have as an option.

    However, if the intent is to improve mental health - I would recommend making it an option to hide all votes in their entirety. One can hide their down votes, but that may just change some peoples perspective from “high number of down votes” to “low number of up votes” which to them may be functionally the same as far as mental health is concerned. Therefore I think that it would be good to have the option for each/both.

    For me this would have another benefit as well - it would allow me to think about and respond to all content in a more objective and honest manner.

  • RedWizard [he/him, comrade/them]
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    178 hours ago

    Yes. As a hexbear user where down votes are disabled I find the experience is much more enjoyable. Ideally down votes off would be the default for servers.

    • NutomicOPM
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      88 hours ago

      This setting is only about how downvotes are displayed. They still exist and will be visible to other users, but not to the post creator. Disabling downvotes entirely as default is a separate discussion.

      • RedWizard [he/him, comrade/them]
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        147 hours ago

        Oh, for sure, I understand the distinction. Not seeing downvotes on your own posts is a good measure for reasons stated. I’m just saying also support a more aggressive stance, which is making downvotes off for new server instances, that’s all.

    • @bloubz@lemmygrad.ml
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      88 hours ago

      Giving feedback from the other side of the comradeship wall, you hardly have downvotes on your comments anyhow. Even libs downvote you less than lemmy.ml and lemmygrad users

  • @TerranFenrir@lemmy.ca
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    1910 hours ago

    I think disabling downvotes totally for the user’s content by default would be a bad idea, because it is important for a user to know if what they are saying is unpopular.

    Here’s an approach I have taken for my app (for all posts and comments).

    • If downvotes are <= 5, downvotes show as 0.
    • If downvotes <= 5%, downvotes show as 0.

    Remember, the reasoning for this is a mere hypothesis and not results obtained from an experiment.

    The 5 percent rule aims to prevent fringe opinions from downvoting. This solves issues like, “why do I have 3 downvotes on a picture of my cute puppy?”.

    The 5 downvotes rule prevents downvoting bias. I have observed this happening on Reddit a lot. If a comment has 3 upvotes and 2 downvotes, people tend to downvote more (just because of the downvote counts and not the content itself). 2 downvotes in a 5 total votes sample size is too small to make any decision about the quality of content.

    In my opinion, cases like these are where the downvotes serve more as a mental health destroyer rather than decentralised content moderation.

    So to answer your question, I think having the current as default would be better, I.e., option “Show”. However, if you’re open to refine this even further, I would suggest the 5-5% idea.

  • @melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    37 hours ago

    Transparency everywhere should be the ultimate goal. Save the social engineering for the capitalists.

  • asudox
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    58 hours ago

    Sure. An off by default option would not hurt.

  • dil [he/him, comrade/them]
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    79 hours ago

    I could see it being a “softer” way of a community enforcing good behavior, especially for things that don’t rise to the level of mod action.

    I’m not on an instance with (visible?) downvotes though, and I do think that makes me more comfortable voicing opinions.

    The hexbear mods/admins will probably have gotten community feedback and done a poll, so might be worth checking with them?

    • nohaybanda [he/him]
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      96 hours ago

      Hexbear does not have downvotes at all. The option isn’t hidden we just can’t downvote. The reason was transphobic harassment/downvote campaigns against our comrades by cowardly piss babies

  • Rimu
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    59 hours ago

    You want to be more welcoming to the people who freak out about downvotes? The people for whom the slightest criticism is a huge problem?

    • @amemorablename@lemmygrad.ml
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      44 hours ago

      This is a misunderstanding of why downvotes can bother people. I will try to put it in perspective with an analogy: Imagine if in RL, you were trying to talk casually with an acquaintance in public. Suddenly, you hear a “boo, [your name].” The boo explicitly uses your full name, not a shortened name, so for the sake of analogy, you know it was directed at you. However, you have no idea who said it or why. All you know is there was a “boo” targeted at you.

      It is just negative noise, divorced from any grounding. Not unlike the psychology of a scary sound in a horror movie, it leaves your imagination to fill in the blanks as to why the noise happened. There can be many explanations for the noise, some of which will have nothing to do with you, personally. But the nature of it is still presented as if it is about you, targeted at you.

      In my understanding, a criticism is usually considered to be something specific that you can engage with. For example, if you yelled at the acquaintance and they said “don’t yell at me over nothing, we were just talking.” That is a criticism and something you could take action based on. You could reflect on whether you were needlessly yelling and if you think you were, you could apologize and try to be more calm in the future. The noise, on the other hand, doesn’t tell you anything clear. So, do you really need to know? What purpose is it serving?

      The spirit of it I suspect comes in some part from the real life forum inspiration of internet forums, where the idea is you are discussing things publicly and openly in front of an audience, and so you might get cheers or jeers. But in practice, this is not really how the internet works. You don’t know who is looking attentively at you and who is not even present. You don’t know who is “cheering” or “jeering” at what point in what you said and because you don’t have any chance of knowing who it is, you can only guess why. The amount of information a downvote gives is virtually nothing, despite what anyone wants to tell themself about adapting their posts because of it; and you can see this reflected in how people react sometimes when they get heavily downvoted. They can get defensive, but in a sort of flailing way, like they’re trying to work out what the hell is going on. Because they haven’t actually been told what the problem is supposed to be. All they have is noise, their imagination, and whatever coping mechanisms they have for dealing with the noise. In this sense, downvotes can be more like a cowardly (in that it is usually anonymous) taunt than actual information. This is not to claim the intent is always or even often a taunt - remember, the point here is you know basically nothing from it - but that the nature of its low information is easily experienced as more akin to a taunt, since there is nothing substantive you can do with it.

      • @amemorablename@lemmygrad.ml
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        14 hours ago

        Also, for further RL comparison, even the best standup comics sometimes lose patience with, and go off on, hecklers. So it’s not like this is something exclusive to the virtual world. People don’t really like being booed.

    • Psychadelligoat
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      16 hours ago

      The people for whom the slightest criticism is a huge problem?

      I mean, it’s .ml, so of course

    • @KimBongUn420@lemmy.ml
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      6 hours ago

      You’re conflating downvotes with criticism. Also if there’s no downvotes you’re more inclined to comment (and criticize) because you can’t lazily downvote

      • Russ
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        66 hours ago

        I think downvotes are criticism/judgment - even if it’s more of a silent type (in lieu of actually replying, as you pointed out).

        Even from the standpoint of “You should only use downvotes to indicate that a comment/post is off topic for the community” that Reddit originally tried to (naively IMO, you can’t enforce it not being a “I disagree” button, but I digress) have is still what I’d consider to be criticism. Mainly because regardless of the vote being cast as that vs a general “I disagree”, it’s still an indication of disapproval of the commenter.

        Criticism of course comes in a lot of forms, and can vary on the “level” of it - I wouldn’t say that downvotes are a high level of criticism, but one nonetheless.

        That’s just my view of it, at least, I can’t see how they wouldn’t be a form of criticism - you shouldn’t use them as a “This breaks the rules” indicator because that should be a report instead of a vote IMO, otherwise it’s far less likely to be acted upon/handled.