@durron597 Hmm, I interacted with the MIT legal department quite a bit on fair use things when making a MOOC, and I seem to remember it being relevant if you copied a small bit or the whole thing.
@durron597 Yeah, basically we ended up emailing a bunch of people getting permission to include their stuff in our online course. I am assuming Lynn did not email blog owner to get permission.
@durron597 Done -- it worried me that it had 5k views, but upon seeing that the answers really added nothing over the answers on the duplicates and the question added no real new searchability and pretty much all aspects of the question were low quality, I voted to delete :)
@josilber Sent an email to Bea, but it bounced: The error that the other server returned was: 554 5.7.1 <admin@stollnitz.com>: Recipient address rejected: Access denied
@LynnCrumbling Too bad -- I've found pretty much always people are cool with their stuff being reposted with attribution, since they posted it on the internet anyway.
@josilber It is.. and I agree; if I could get in touch with the blog author, I'm willing to bet it would be fine.. especially, according to the blog from archive.org, "All original code referenced in this blog is licensed under the Open Software License version 3.0."
It confuses me why the original author was notified back in 2012 that their answer wasn't sufficient, yet they took no interest in updating it. As a 7.8k user, you would think that would be ...appropriate.
Do we get to nominate tags for reviewing? The postfix-mta tag is almost exclusively off-topic ... I review it from time to time but my close votes usually expire before I get any seconds.
@tripleee I think the first step would be creating a burnination request on meta in which you make the case for purging the tag and get community feedback. This room has been very active in actually carrying out approved burnination requests.
@josliber I don't want to burninate the tag, it just needs continued cleanup. Like many platform tags ubuntucentoswindows etc it tends to attract a lot of OT questions, but the tag as such is legit
@tripleee It seems like there are lots of proposals for non-burnination tag cleanups on meta -- I found a number on the first page of meta.stackoverflow.com/search?q=cleanup
@tripleee I helped out last year in keeping the tags efi, uefi and grub clean by close voting from the queue once a week or so. If I recall correctly that one started as a meta post.
I was recently applying my limited SQL skills to poke through a list of users with many answers, all of which exceed some minimum score. While this query highlights some really awesome contributors (50 answers, all with score 3+!), I also identified what I suspect to be a spam ring. Normally I wo...
Being a victim of a Key Logger attack on android, I want to develop a solution for KeyLogger attacks for android. I know basic java and a little about android and very little about Information Security. I am also aware that whatever knowledge I have is not enough to figure out and to develop a so...
@NathanOliver @josilber I'm curious... what was the first clue that got you looking at these guys? We've had a couple of other cases recently where a link-only answer that got upvoted quicly was the first indicator, and that led into looking at other answers and questions by the same user, then patterns with other users became apparent.\
But yeah, almost all of my voting fraud flags come from noticing very new answers of low quality that have multiple upvotes. If I dig deeper and find a pattern of upvoted poor answers then I flag and ask mods to dig more.
@josilber I saw that... just wasn't sure it actually was the first thing. Interesting, because development of some kind of pattern matching queries would make it easier to identify these rings than it is to stumble on them.
@Mogsdad Yeah. The reason I was digging at that point was that I had actually flagged somebody who had 14 answers, all with score 2+ (and had noticed a new one that was quickly upvoted). I found the answers to be of low quality (and promotional without attribution) so I flagged for mod review. To make the point of how unusual it was to have that many answers, all scored 2+, I made this query. Then I started looking at other results from the query.
@Mogsdad Yeah, I find these sorts of flags get processed pretty slowly. I suppose it makes sense -- they're not super urgent and they require some digging (and perhaps chatting with SE employees to investigate voting fraud).
@Mogsdad A few "maybe" hits but nothing clear enough to flag imo. You can check out the other results yourself though -- maybe you can find something!
@Mogsdad Yeah, though we don't have access to who upvoted whom (not even mods do), so it would be tough to identify the ring with the data we have available. I suppose an SE employee could, and they probably do have some tools of this type.
@josilber I flagged 12 posts by Apigee employees; 2 Spam (1 declined, 1 helpful), 5 custom with details (3 helpful, 2 pending - each reference 2+ posts), and 5 NAA (all helpful). I imagine there's some digging going on.
@josilber Sadly - yeah... we like the in depth digging around stuff, but as long as they're not actively harming the site, and until someone has potentially an hour/more to sit down and focus on it, they do tend to sit around for a bit longer than really wanted...
@JonClements Makes total sense to me. Heck, the possible spam ring I posted about has been sitting around since 2012 -- clearly not urgent to clean up in 2015.
@JonClements This is so, so much higher scoring than anything else I've done on any SE site! It did make me feel uneasy to call out all the potential offenders on meta, though :/
I really did feel like a detective working through it. The first time I went through Rachel's posts I actually concluded it was somewhat suspicious (high upvotes for low quality) but nothing too alarming (old posts collect upvotes). The second time I went through her posts I noticed and started following the highly upvoted comments, which led me to more users promoting the same products, which is when I became suspicious.
@Mogsdad bummer on the negative response about your request for clarification on reporting complicated spam rings (I upvoted, and think it's an interesting question). Perhaps post it as a separate discussion question on meta?
@josilber Meh. You guys know I'm involved - the maddening crowd don't. I know that lots of effort goes into these investigations- and while I agreee that no official policy is needed (and @durron597, I didn't ask for one), we don't know how far we need to take investigations to ensure they are acted on, and don't waste anyone's time.
@Mogsdad Completely agree. There may not be consensus among mods -- bluefeet and boltclock seemed to disagree in the comments on your answer. I would have thought that all the post links and rationale would be useful (obviously mods still need to look at everything, but at least you have a link to it), but perhaps it could be delivered in a better way. Useful to hear mod feedback about that.
In his answer to Possible spam ring, but trying to describe it is too long for the custom moderator textbox, Brad Larson says that it should be enough to raise a custom flag with only some of the evidence:
Thanks for pointing this out. Even a little bit for us to go on in an "other" moderator...
@JonClements Brad Larson lightly scolded me here for posting the ring on meta, so I think I will custom flag with a link to a private gist if I encounter more rings that need extensive explanation.
@Kyll yes, if the bounty expires without being awarded and no answer meets the automatic criteria, you get half the bounty because you've met that criteria
iam - 242 questions, wiki
amazon-iam - 191 questions, identical wiki excerpt
aws-iam-roles - 12 questions, no wiki
Even though amazon-iam is slightly smaller question wise, I think that it should be the master as it's more descriptive.
I think that aws-iam-roles serves no purpose and all ques...
For those interested in the (now-confirmed and handled) spam ring, I'm impressed by the sneakiness one final time -- from the reputation change of the only non-deleted account it's clear they occasionally downvoted each other to avoid automated detection.
I don't understand why the margin-bottom on the container isn't working here. The footer appears to be ignoring it. Any help appreciated.
https://jsfiddle.net/LzLzttqu/
.container {
display: block;
background: orange;
margin-bottom: 15px;
width: 690px;
overflow: auto;
}
.content {
float: left;...
So this user is hammering the Django section with edit suggestions to add the python tag to any questions that omit it. There are also some valid suggestions, but the focus of this effort seems to be to add python to all the things.
The question of mine edited today is about the Django command-l...
@Mogsdad Heh, it was not even about the tags themselves. Doing hundred of useless edits is not acceptable in any way, I am surprised he hasn't been edit-banned yet
Anyway.... apologies for not being around that much guys - been way too busy IRL - been quite frustrating really... "normal service" should resume shortly :p
There are a couple of problems with this:
The meaning of "too minor" varies widely between individuals. Are trivial changes always too minor, or only too minor when they ignore other, more damning problems with the post? The edits you provide as examples illustrate this nicely - even the last o...
> Get rid of the "too minor" reject reason entirely. If it's really too minor, reviewers should demonstrate that by providing a not-minor edit. If the reviewer opts to build upon the edit instead of starting over from the current revision, then it isn't too minor! Done.
So my understanding is that "reject as too minor" isn't a thing (anymore).
@MichaelT Nah, they should just say "Other" and write "too minor". I'd like to see stats on the number of times each choice is used, but I'm willing to bet that "Too Minor" was near the top. — TylerHSep 9 '14 at 13:32
@josilber Oh wait. They are not cool to circumvent question bans but if you delete account one and then start a new one after sometime, that shouldn't be much of a problem.
as long as you can't do more than you could have with one account
@rene Ah, OK. I had kind of understood the situation in the post we're talking about (meta.stackoverflow.com/q/305948/3093387) to be that the person had to keep getting new accounts due to downvotes (and presumably question bans) and was therefore annoyed about the downvotes. I may have misunderstood the situation -- not a ton of detail given.
@durron597 Presumably a custom flag? The non-urgent ones can take a while (flagging folks making bad suggested edits, e.g.). I have 96 pages of flags so I've stopped flipping through until our meta requests for flag filtering are granted.
iam - 242 questions, wiki
amazon-iam - 191 questions, identical wiki excerpt
aws-iam-roles - 12 questions, no wiki
Even though amazon-iam is slightly smaller question wise, I think that it should be the master as it's more descriptive.
I think that aws-iam-roles serves no purpose and all ques...
I imagine it was put it as a bit of a fail safe that if a bot ran riot, it was easier and a good faith thing for a mod to be able to shut it down via a command, than having to contact the owner, or someone with privs to do so, rather than suspending it
I think the idea is simply that the privileges restriction is just to make sure no one with 20 rep starts ordering the bots around, so mods are always trusted
@MartijnPieters Sure, I know you're overloaded, but I figure my flags help. Unless you're telling me they actively don't help, in which case I'll definitely stop.
no time for anything at the moment - kicking off some emails and making a few posts in chat :) Trying to clear my time for picking up flags in a few hours :)
@josilber I have forcefully ended your last session. To see more details use the command last session stats. In addition, the number of review items is most likely not set, use the command last session edit count <new count> to fix that.