Perhaps: Open a Github issue per page, pin a pointer to the first one in the room for a week, then move to the next one being pined the next week. That would draw attention to each page in succession, with industrious people being able to work on more if they desire. Maybe a first issue which is organization??
That has user editable wikis and q and a stuff that could be used and it has users log in via a stack app and you can add/remove approved editors etc...
You all probably had enough timeouts by now. Thank you all for participating, it's time to wrap up and move on. This room will stay open while we keep discussing issue #4, then be locked until the next meeting. Conclusions will be published soon.
re the minefield thing: I don't think making cv-pls requests needs to be a minefield. If we find that someone's accidentally posted two requests for the same user, we let them know, they delete it, and we can be done with it.
@πάνταῥεῖ I entirely agree. Now, how can an external reader distinguish between such a user and harassment from a regular? THAT is the critical question.
Note: The discussion for Issue 4 has significantly broadened beyond the narrow question of if we want to remove the link to the user. While, I'm fine with that, the broader discussion of what constitutes targeting (etc.) was not something the rest of the room users knew was going to be discussed.
@rene okay it's a light weight flask app and easy to setup - it's at github.com/sopython/sopython-site if you want to take a look. And obviously it's live on sopython.com in case no one's seen it.
@Kyll we should just add a nice modal for everyone who visits SOCVR's chat or transcript that says "please familiarize yourself with our policies before you grab your pitchfork" :-) and whitelist room regulars to avoid it
@JanDvorak We would still need to define in what time-frame those 2, 3, 4, etc. cv-pls requests were made to trigger user-targeting detection. Is that in a 24 hour period? 12 hours?
New Proposal: discuss all issues by proxy of analogy and parable. If we avoid direct discussion of issues then we can skirt any accusations of untoward behavior
if we want to go with /user/day, then 4 is limiting and bound to happen by accident, and 2/user/day is bound to happen by accident to everyone, everyday
Not that I'm doing so often, but sometimes I have a look at a particular user's profile and drill down to their questons. But usually I don't blame that at the SOCVR, but just put my regular down and close votes there. I'm aware of serial voting, but sometimes there are bad users that deserve that.
I actually can't understand why you have this problem, if you accidentally make 2 request delete one (if someone notice), who cares if question is closed or not... there are 100K that are not
Everyone: Please keep in mind that we're not (as far as I know) talking about absolute limits, just auto-detection (with an auto-post? in room) for a human to step in and look at the issue, and perhaps inquire of the person posting.
if we call out any case where the same person cv-plses the same person's question twice in the span of three days, how many false accusations do we have to diffuse? six per day?
If we want to expect the bot to err on the site of calling out needlessly, be sure to word the warning in a way that indicates that maybe, just maybe, they, in fact, did not do anything wrong after all.
@JanDvorak We can have rule discussions, as long as we're actually getting somewhere with them and not repeating a discussion we've had a dozen times before
@Makyen just FYI, this is what the RO's will see when a user or post is targeted: i.stack.imgur.com/nfpVg.png we basically analyze what is posted and in which context after which we take action of leave it
@TylerH I don't believe that's really necessary as mentioned. If non of my comments or close votes are fruitful, I'd rather consider mod flagging before posting serial cv-pls requests.
OK. So, is there some in-room notification (i.e. beyond Slack's notice to ROs) still under discussion? Are we still discussing having some stated detection level (instead of the currently unstated exact detection level, just keeping the nebulous "don't target users")?
Personally, I'm happy with a solution that allows me to keep not paying any attention to who the the user is when I make a request. I don't want to have to be looking back over my requests going: "Did I previously post a cv-pls request about this user in the last X-time?" I don't have a problem with being notified, or asked about why, I'm posting such requests.
"don't target users" is reasonable. "Don't post cv-pls the same user twice in three days" is not, even if we acknowledge the rule was broken by accident.
@JanDvorak Auto-trashing anything other than obvious abuses feels excessive. I was happy when I understood that a human/RO was going to be notified, and could then handle it on a case by case basis. Are we moving away from that?
@JanDvorak let me defuse the three days: we monitor up to 24 hours max and if there is a time gap of several hours we are much less eager to take action.
@JanDvorak self-dups tend to generate multiple cv-pls requests because the dup (or dups) has/have to be closed, and the original question is often closable too.
It is fairly easy to determine when a someone is going through a user's profile and requesting close votes for all of their questions. It is also fairly easy to determine when someone just happens upon two bad questions from the same user while reviewing posts. It is extremely difficult to determine when someone is trying to fake it.
It seams like there are metrics which could be defined (including filtering out cases of self-dups, etc.) (actually, detecting, going through a profile vs. through new/active posts should be reasonably easy to detect). I'm not sure if it's worth the effort to do so when what we are talking about is informing a human that something should be looked at. Reducing false positives on the part of the auto-detection reduces the effort which the humans need to spend looking into each case.
If someone is burning through a user's question list, we'll notice even without a script. If someone is trying to obfuscate it, they should be responsible for it on meta, not us.
We didn't have a reasonable way to track it, simple as that.
Did a CM tell us to monitor our members and prevent them from doing it? No.
@NobodyNada I think the issue is that it's not necessarily violating the rule. The rule is "don't target specific users". The rule isn't don't post 3 cv-pls requests about the same user in X-time. The rule inherently requires knowing the reason behind the user finding the questions to cv-pls.
The current rule is "don't target users". The current rule is doing just fine. Having the rule is all that meta wants from us. Don't fix what isn't broken.
> Do not post multiple successive moderation requests for posts of the same user. It will be considered as targetting a user which is explicitly forbidden.
@JanDvorak let me defuse the three days: we monitor up to 24 hours max and if there is a time gap of several hours we are much less eager to take action.