if any moderators are seeing this I would like to bring an important issue which I want you people to look after. Recently I was banned from SO, the reason stated by SO or the moderators were that I tried to artificially inflate my upvotes. Now let me tell you the story, actually I have a rival in my college he know this fact about how the SO algorithm identifies those people who artificially inflate the upvotes. So what he did was he began upvoting my answers from his account daily.
I was daily getting some reputation on SO. someday een 40-50. I did not know about this then. But SO bots thought that daily from the same account I am getting upvotes, so I must be artificially increasing my reputation and hence the moderators blocked me for one month. I even told the moderators about this story but no one believed me. I hope someone will look onto this issue and help us out with this.
Moderators usually delete accounts and contact you if and only if they are 100% sure that it is an alternate account. You can contact Stack Exchange directly, if you want to still pursue the issue.
@HimanshuPoddar This room is not an appropriate place to discuss that. If you have an issue with the way a moderator handled something, you can contact the company directly.
Regardless of the outcome, I am really grateful for the group we had nominate this election, and wish everyone the best. Whoever is elected will have big shoes to fill, and I am confident that whoever it is will rise to the challenge. Thanks to everyone who nominated, and good luck in the primaries and election to come!
Yeah, I know. Just seems worse there (at least from various media coverage of stuff). But I haven't checked with every single country either, so /shrug
Guyz listen I don't know any of the people who has stood up for the moderator election. So how do I decide whom to vote. Where can I find the contribution of candidates to this websites so that I can decide whom to vote?
@HimanshuPoddar depends on what you're looking for.
You can see all the public stuff by clicking on their name (to see the profile, 1), including questions and answers. There's also a shortcut to the meta profile (3) and main-site reviews (2). Pic for reference
The final phase of the election is single transferable vote, right? So, if my 1st choice were to be elected in the first round, for example, my ballot "paper" would then be out of play and my 2nd and 3rd choices become irrelevant as my vote is "spent"?
whereas if my 1st choice were eliminated in the first round, my vote would transfer to choice #2
what I remember of the student union election system was that one could if so desired state a preference for each and every candidate. In addition there was a procedural 'candidate' called RON - "Reopen Nominations". So, if for example, there were 7 candidates and I liked 5, I would order those 5 in preference and put RON at number 6. If RON were to be "elected" that position would remain unfilled and another election would be called.
@Jean-FrançoisFabre Weeell.... That used to be the case up until '15, then they changed the formula, but they changed it again for this years election, and it's now v = sqrt(sin(a))/(sqrt(42)) + (441, 911)*pi^2 + cos(b) * mc^2 - 1/(cos(c) + c^2) :p
@MadaraUchiha I think you're confusing it with the very similar pcr = sqrt(sin(a))/(sqrt(42)) + (441, 911)*pi^2 + cos(b) * micAirflow^2 - 1/(cos(c) + c^2)
A vector-valued function, also referred to as a vector function, is a mathematical function of one or more variables whose range is a set of multidimensional vectors or infinite-dimensional vectors. The input of a vector-valued function could be a scalar or a vector (that is, the dimension of the domain could be 1 or greater than 1); the dimension of the domain is not defined by the dimension of the range.
== Example: helix ==
A common example of a vector-valued function is one that depends on a single real number parameter t, often representing time, producing a vector v(t) as the result. In...
@Jean-FrançoisFabre Machine Learning is basically code that learn to perform a task without hueristics (as in, in trying to figure out spam, I don't code things like if (body.contains('viagra')) { setSpam(true); }
So instead, what I will do is pick a few features (for example, not so great features would be the length of the body and length of the subject), and examine a sample of a few thousands of emails, and try to see how much weight those features of an email have in determining whether an email is spam or not
The code you'd write will try to find some multipliers of the length of the body and the length of the subject, where if I give it any new email, it will predict relatively accurately whether or not it's spam.
I already developped heuristics & tests like this, it's nice when it's properly tuned so it saves a lot of manual work. Spam detection is a science, maybe even an art.
A neural network is even stronger in that you don't need to pick the features from the email, you can simply encode the entire email as a long vector (say, all of the ascii codes of all the characters in the subject + email), and write code to figure out on its own which of the features are the most significant.
I've wrote all the middleware/strings/file part for the current project. when my colleagues google on SO for C++ they don't understand anything and/or they do the wrong method. You cannot learn a language by asking questions :)
So they just have to use my custom framework and surprise: it works.
At some point one guy was disappointed because "everything was already done" (he didn't know C++ too much, I supposed he just wanted to "build" something new at the expense of the project)
Hell starts when you contract the middleware to bozos thinking that it's not functional code so not important.
@smileycreations15 Give me a distro that doesn't overwrite the other bootloaders, isn't a part of the Windows Linux Subsystem, and works with the graphics drivers
I installed Ubuntu once. It overwrite the bootloaders and I couldn't use graphics drivers. I talked to someone else about it a while ago, and i t's not supposed to do that, so I'd rather not go through that again.
At first, everyone feared the Welcoming Wagon. Some even thought that SOCVR was going to be closed (I wasn't so dramatic...). Everyone mocked the welcoming style, including me (using the waving hand as avatar for a while)
But I must admit that it forces everyone to be nice. Which doesn't mean we don't downvote & close, but it really cuts the snark to a minimum.
@MadaraUchiha Mainly towards a more welcoming site, by attempting to reduce the amount of unwelcoming and/or offensive comments (which I'm under the impression is the main area of concern). The update to comment flags and the CoC at least demonstrates that. Whether it has worked or not is a separate concern.
That doesn't mean that we don't get to laugh in comments sometimes, but not at the expense of unexperienced users. So it was positive, beyond my expectations.
Now the downside: some clowns accuse you of being unwelcoming when you don't do their homework.
@Jean-FrançoisFabre Speaking of users, after the welcoming it seems like a bunch of users take negative reception of a question or answer more personally (and/or as proof SE is toxic). It seems like downvotes trigger the "this site is so unwelcoming" comments more now
The main issue IMHO was really snarky comments. I don't care about the rest. That alone was worth saying somethng. I'm ignoring other things that SO blog or whatever says.
I was never for snark or stinginess in comments, but I always thought that the solution wouldn't be through governing the outcome, but solving the underlying issue (hundreds upon hundreds of crap posts a day)
Stuff in answers can be edited out and is considerably easier to notice, but comments can fly right past the radar of even invested moderators (diamond and otherwise)
@MadaraUchiha Yes, I was unhappy with that implication (it seemed to me that if ppl here were rude they were rude to everyone and anyone). But of course, I don't get to see what you moderators do.
@Jean-FrançoisFabre That's something a lot of people don't seem to think we do. That's one of the backing reasons behind it I think. SO has always moderated content and not people (although revenge downvoting and voting circles show there are periodic exceptions)
If a minority group doesn't feel welcome because of the language used, even if that language can't be considered offensive by normal measurements, you can't really address the problem.
My personal strategy on bad questions (unless it's blatant homework dump with no research), is to close with duplicate/too broad/whatever, but also comment to help OP figuring out the particular case. I found out people react very positively with personalized comments. And the question is roombaed so it doesn't pollute the site for long.
@MadaraUchiha if it's a minority group, well, let's ignore that until it becomes several minority groups. If we don't know that the problem is we cannot fix it.
@Jean-FrançoisFabre They did mention several minority groups in the post
Too many people experience Stack Overflow¹ as a hostile or elitist place, especially newer coders, women, people of color, and others in marginalized groups.
We want questions, and we want people to feel comfortable and safe posting their questions without getting snark or going through hell to get an answer
Honestly, from people I speak with IRL I feel like the usual flow is "ask first question, get told your question is bad, and that your problem is stupid, and that you're stupid for asking (not in so many words), leave Stack Overflow, never look back"
@MadaraUchiha for instance there's some heuristics which predicts that you're going to get downvotes because of your title. Every time I ignored that warning, I got upvotes instead.
@smileycreations15 well, post a link, for starters.
@MadaraUchiha that's for sure! For instance I wanted to add some rule to warn if the question starts by "write". Because a great deal of homework questions start by that.
We could add rules to detect code dumps / prevent too long code dumps too. Well, some would object that people could choose to ignore those warnings and continue.