What happens to downvotes when instances have different policies?

My instance has downvoting enabled, but I’ve learned that some other instances do not. Do the vote totals look different to users on different instances? It seems like some users on instances that don’t allow downvoting are unaware that it’s not the same lemmy-wide. It would be pretty confusing for them to see their vote go down.

Cevilia,
@Cevilia@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I’m on an instance that has downvoting disabled. I can’t downvote. But, I also only see upvotes, and posts even on other instances are sorted by raw upvotes (not upvotes minus downvotes). If you downvote something, it looks exactly like if you’d not voted at all.

clueless_stoner,
@clueless_stoner@lemmy.world avatar

That sounds like a bad thing.

Cevilia,
@Cevilia@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I disagree. Downvotes rarely add anything of value to the discussion that can’t be expressed simply by not upvoting. There’s no nuance to a downvote, and they’re so often misused to the extent that I’m glad not to have to worry about them.

Wit,

I respectfully disagree. Downvotes add a way of gauging the percent of people who support/don't support a comment. Let's say I'm asking for advice about which product to buy. With an upvotes-only system the upvote count is biased towards the earliest comment, whereas with an up/down vote system, the ratio helps you detect comments with heavy bias or blatantly wrong facts. So an upvote/downvote system makes it easier to tell the credibility of a comment, basically allowing you to indirectly gauge the opinion of the community rather than the one person who commented.

Cevilia,
@Cevilia@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I see your points, and they do make sense, but I respectfully disagree with your conclusion. My reasoning is that, from my experience, a downvote has no nuance. A reply saying “this is wrong and here’s why” with a hundred upvotes is useful. A downvote is basically the equivalent of flicking a peanut.

yourgodlucifer,

does a comment/post really need hundreds of comments saying similar things it also helps to hide spam content and trolls

Cevilia,
@Cevilia@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

No, why would you think that?

yourgodlucifer,

You remove the downvotes you juat get people more people in the comments with "you're an idiot" or whatever instead of just a downvote.

It's not like those kinds of comments are really that nuanced or helpfull either.

nottheengineer,

The thing is that people usually won’t take the time to write that reply and in case of trolls, they shouldn’t be wasting their time.

YouTube’s dislikes used to be great for telling useful content apart from useless spam at a glance without even clicking on it. They removed them, so now we have to read the comments before watching a video if we want to avoid wasting time.

In this day and age, information flows so fast there isn’t always time for nuance. The downvote isn’t perfect and misused often, but it does serve a purpose.

tate,
@tate@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I have a counter example where downvotes are very useful. In r/askphysics we would downvote any comment that had errors or was completely wrong. A post didnt have to be around long before it became clear what the consensus answer was. This was much more helpful to the asker than just showing them a bunch of answers, and responses to those answers, and leaving them to discern who is most credible.

In that case, just not voting wouldn’t help. And if you have downvoting, you can still just not vote when that’s more appropriate. That’s what I do for opinions I simply disagree with.

eatham,
@eatham@aussie.zone avatar

They just can’t downvote but other people can downvote them

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