[Question] How Much Do Different Users Really Care About Upvotes?

For the last several years, I’ve known people who’ve submitted articles to the EA Forum or LessWrong, and found that the culture on these sites is pretty hostile to the kinds of views they’re presenting (different people have different opinions of the patterns of hostility to different views on the EA Forum and LW, respectively). What the particular views are doesn’t matter, because it’s been all kinds of views. What’s common between them is a perception an article they wrote they believe to be quite good was “poorly received” on the site, while still having a positive and significant number of upvotes. Now, none of the articles I’m thinking of had what I would call a high number of upvotes, but it was enough that at least several people had read the article, and a majority of them had upvoted the post. As a proportion of the people who read the article, it tells us a very significant minority, typically between 30-45%, disagreed with or disliked it enough to downvote it.

So, they’re articles which are not very well-received. Unless I’m missing something, an article having a positive number of upvotes should be interpreted as one’s article being at least somewhat well-received by the readers. If someone thinks that an article on the EA Forum or LW has received too many downvotes, or not enough upvotes, because there is something wrong with the general culture of the respective membership bases of these sites, that is one argument. Yet that is a different one than the arguments I see typically made by those who complain about the proportion of upvotes:downvotes they receive on the EA Forum or LessWrong. They just say that based on the appearance of not receiving strong, consistent, vocal support for their articles that they would like to have seen, that the reception to their article was overwhelmingly and uniformly negative. This is in spite of the fact they received at least a higher proportion of positive:negative feedback, even if only on the measure of karma. In other words, it’s my observation a lot of people who complain as if they’ve gotten uniformly, overwhelmingly, and inappropriately negative feedback on their articles have false impressions of how their articles were received, and are wrong.

The common tendency I see in articles like this is that there is often a high proportion of comments that disagree with or criticize the OP, and that these comments often receive more upvotes than the OP. So, it seems like what people are really upset about when their articles on the EA Forum or LW receive a merely a lukewarm reception, as opposed to an overwhelmingly negative one, is that, while there are at least a majority of the community who at least weakly supports them, there is a significant minority of the community who is more willing to strongly and vocally disagree with, criticize, or oppose them.

It seems to me one solution, to move to a better equilibrium of discussion, would be for users who agree with an original article, but are able to make the arguments for its thesis better than the original author, to write their own comments and articles that do so. There is a fear of politics among some rationalists, so that stigmatizes discussions that might appear to heighten tensions between different groups of people within effective altruism, and/​or the rationality community. It’s my impression in these communities there is also a culture of letting an individuals words and ideas stand on their own, and not associating the arguments from just one individual on one side of a debate to everyone on that side of the debate. So, it strikes me as unlikely the vast majority of any effective altruists or LessWrongers would care enough to join an interpersonal/​intercernine online disagreement to the point the community at large should have to concern ourselves about whether we should quell it.

Of course, one of the reasons LW and the EA Forum use karma scores as they do is so for the discourse on these fora to be shaped in a way satisfying to most users, without us all having to get bogged down in endless debates about the state of the discourse itself. At least that is what I’ve taken the karma systems of LW and the EA Forum in large part to be about, and why I have what I believe is an appropriate level of respect for them. They’re certainly not everything one should take into account for evaluating the quality of an article on LW or the EA Forum. Yet I don’t think they should definitely count for little, or even nothing, which is sometimes the reaction I see from EA Forum or LW members who aren’t satisfied with the proportion and kind of positive feedback their article receives, especially relative to the proportion and kind of negative feedback received.

These are my impressions as a long-time user of both the EA Forum and LessWrong. I was just wondering what other people’s thoughts on the subject are; whether they’re similar to, or different than, mine; and why.