12:02 AM
Essentially, the welcome wagon, with its cargo of Twitter-waving deadbeats, political ladder-climbers and naive social justice warriors, has collided with SO and destroyed it. — Martin James 1 min ago
12:22 AM
@IncreasinglyIdiotic: *..is not, and never should've been..." I'm afraid that while the second part may be true the first is not. I and many others use rep as a rough measure of everything good, be it intelligence, expertise, or problem-solving skill. I know it's unreliable yet my instinct is treat to high-rep users with deference on all matters. — James Reinstate Monica Polk 56 secs ago
12:34 AM
Understood. IME, it mainly happens on homework questions, so I assume it's school friends upvoting each other's posts (and as I said in that answer, they possibly don't even realise they are doing anything wrong). If a few friends are studying together, and they're stuck on their homework, one posts a question, the others upvote it, and they all get the benefit of the answers. — PM 2Ring 1 min ago
It's a glorified "are you sure?" dialog. Unfortunately it's in a place where the average user doesn't expect there to be any. — Roddy of the Frozen Peas 22 secs ago
12:52 AM
It's been closed as a duplicate. The linked duplicate is 10 years old, and the answers are out of date - there have been new features added to the language since (documentation linked in an edit to the question. Now he's saying the question is too broad, not a duplicate. Respectfully to Alexi, and the time he's taken to moderate here, but I feel as the goalposts are being moved. — Scuba Steve 1 min ago
1:34 AM
Looks like HCL AppScan is already a thing. Is that related to IBM's product? — Cody Gray ♦ 19 secs ago
1:50 AM
You should not make voting decisions based upon weight or the presence of existing votes. Instead, you should be voting based on your assessment of the usefulness and/or correctness of the post. If you thought the question was valuable, then you upvoted it; if you thought it was not (because it showed no research effort, didn't make sense, or was otherwise not useful), then you downvoted it. Because we later change the weight of those votes does not have any effect on the core judgement there, the value of the post. For more on why it's retroactive, see Mark's excellent answer. — Cody Gray ♦ 45 secs ago
2:06 AM
I disagree that it's straightforward. If I'm logging out of StackOverflow, I have to notice that "StackOverflow" is something like 7th on the list. After reading a few entries, I think the average person would just be like, "What are these other sites? This doesn't apply to me." closes the window, leaving them not actually logged out. — user1118321 19 secs ago
π This is a horrible idea. Here's a chat room you can go to to ask for clarifications: chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/197438/the-meta-room — Cody Gray ♦ 40 secs ago
Possible duplicate of How come I get new updates on Meta but not on Stack Overflow itself? — CertainPerformance 1 min ago
1 hour later…
3:26 AM
4:10 AM
@Pureferret - I've seen it done. I've seen COMMENTS statiing it's the reason for upvotes. Heck sometimes I did it myself, though not as a policy. Both on SO and smaller sites — DVK 31 secs ago
It looks like you are proposing to "require comments on downvotes" - which is duplicate... If it is not what you are looking for - edit the question to clarify. I.e. if you are looking for feedback on particular questions - ask one at a time and tag "specific-question". — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
@AnsgarWiechers - doubtful. Powers that be are of an ideological persuasion of "participation medals are better than earned achievements", to go on a bumper sticker level of nuance. — DVK 46 secs ago
4:44 AM
2 hours later…
6:20 AM
@PeterCordes I would argue most questions aren't useful, irrespective of whether they get answers. Using view count per day as a crude measure of usefulness lends some credence to that hypothesis. That said, almost all of the questions with higher view rates do have answers. — jpmc26 1 min ago
6:38 AM
@Tom we are currently discussing about the ability to offer a bounty to reward an answer on a closed question. So in this context, "good" is at least worth 50 rep from the bounty offerer's. And no, a question that got a good answer certainly wasn't too broad, if it were one could not have given a "good" answer that do fit in the limit of characters, not "primarily opinion based", opinions are not worth of any bounty, neither unclear, how do you provide a "good" answer to a question you can't understand? off-topic? could be but since it did generate good content, closing it is not needed. — Kaiido 16 secs ago
7:22 AM
8:02 AM
every downvote is justified by the text you can read in the tooltip when you hover on the arrow. — Temani Afif 48 secs ago
8:46 AM
I don't know... In one hand I understand and even felt the same myself recently on one of my questions that received supsicious downvotes before being auto deleted, in the other hand I also feel it is actually needed for numerous abandoned questions. Isn't the undelete feature enough to handle false positives? — Kaiido 58 secs ago
9:22 AM
This is pure censorship. Mods can't possible know the intricacies of every programming language to be able to decide which comment is useful or not. Let's see how long this comment stays on... — rustyx 26 secs ago
They just used two accounts to vote, only the votes from the one that voted three times were rolled back. Mods don't mind chasing sock accounts. — Hans Passant 1 min ago
If you want me to justify downvotes, taking the risk of backfire insults/threats/Twitter etc, please PayPal $100 up front. — Martin James 58 secs ago
CM can see exactly who voted. It's very likely that the one who did that is identified. The mod flag will have to be escalated to them in that case, but yes, that's the thing to do and we usually follow in cases like this. — Jean-François Fabre ♦ 1 min ago
Just re-ask the question. Add whatever additional details youβve learned since the question was originally posted. In a couple of days youβll be able to post a bounty. Roomba is quite conservative already, and youβve have all the tools to sidestep this particular side case if you believe itβs worth it. — yivi 18 secs ago
10:26 AM
That's on page 55 of your flag history. You went back and dug that up just as evidence to answer this question? That's dedication. — Cody Gray ♦ 46 secs ago
10:56 AM
11:50 AM
12:24 PM
Do you think we should do the same for upvotes? I don't agree with a lot of the upvotes on the site... — Patrice 5 secs ago
1 hour later…
1:26 PM
@YvetteColomb Ah, so that's what depresses Hans so badly. Was that an official change in policy that took place somewhere in the past? — Gert Arnold 1 min ago
1:38 PM
Look I think this is very wise indeed. To value the question as equal to the answer takes away exclusivity and elitism which plagues this site and in fact: the tech community at large. — BitShift 50 secs ago
I find these comments quite troubling. It seems there are those in the community that value the answer as a bargaining chip. All they have are the answers they give and now that exclusive club is being measured against those that ask good questions. I would like to point out that the only reason you get to rise to the top of the point system is because someone else asked the question. They also share in the priviledge of your knowledge. For those talking about 'democracy': yeh but when the site is evidently over-flowing with elitism, maybe democracy is the last thing we need. — BitShift 1 min ago
I also had flagged similar situation on 6 Oct, around a month ago and the flag was marked as helpful, but still waiting for a reversal by CM team — Patel Romil 1 min ago
@joshmcode, except this isn't a corporate site. This isn't even a meritocracy, it's a shared community with a flat structure. The points are a trust system, not a paycheck. Also your analogy is incorrect coz Steve Jobs. The man who asked the questions and yet knew precisely f%$k all about computing. — BitShift 1 min ago
It is indeed far too broad, goalposts or not. @Scuba, just scope the linked question to the questions that are covered by the duplicate and ask a new question for each of the remaining questions you have. You get your answers, we get a clean, orderly site. Win win. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
I'm not entirely sure what you're asking/proposing here. As far as I understand, you can already specify which OpenID provider you want to use: Google, GitHub, Facebook, or Stack Exchange. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
If a user is creating accounts with simple passwords and not carefully protecting those accounts, the repercussions of that are all on them, not on the sites they've elected to use those accounts on. — Heretic Monkey 59 secs ago
@Heretic Monkey: but would it be better if we allow the user to disconnect with that account in case that account gets hacked? During student time, we may create accounts with simple passwords without being aware of any security consequenses due to lack of knowledge (and forget about it). — Khanh TO 15 secs ago
Comparing the login pages for the two sites side-by-side, they look pretty similar to me. The major difference is that LeetCode has the OpenID provider links as icons across the bottom, whereas Stack Overflow puts buttons at the top. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@Cody Gray: as i mentioned in my first comment, you don't need to add the provider to "My logins" section first to be able to login with stackoverflow. Whereas in leetcode.com, even your OpenID provider has the same email with the leetcode email, you still cannot login until you connect with it in the connect with OpenID provider section, and in case your OpenId provider is hacked, you can disconnect with that account — Khanh TO 2 mins ago
@Heretic Monkey: thanks, i will try again. I was able to login with Github even Github was missing in "My logins" and it was "automatically" added after i login — Khanh TO 18 secs ago
You can disconnect your account -- under My logins, there's a remove link next to each account. Also, I'm logged into GitHub, and when I go to My logins, it doesn't show up there. I have to click "add more logins..." and specifically add GitHub. — Heretic Monkey 2 mins ago
@Heretic Monkey: after removing the Github login, i cannot login now. It works like you said, but it seems it does not work that way for the first time login — Khanh TO 44 secs ago
I'd ask a new question, tagged as a
bug
or support
with as much detail as you can about the sequence of events. — Heretic Monkey 38 secs ago@Heretic Monkey: yes, we can disconnect with an OpenID provider after it's connected, but we cannot prevent it from automatically being added for the first time login — Khanh TO 14 secs ago
2:52 PM
Possible duplicate of Upvotes on questions will now be worth the same as upvotes on answers — Ivar 55 secs ago
3:46 PM
@RadonRosborough: the keyboard shortcuts need to be enabled explicitly, and include context-sensitive help. When you have them enabled and you use
?
, you get a menu of options including O
: order answers by .... When you first start using them, autohelp is also enabled, which pops up a menu the moment you use the O
key, showing you what next key is needed to sort the answers. I'm not sure how much better the UI for a feature that's meant to avoid having to use the GUI can be here? — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min agoIt looks to me (as an outsider to the company, but with moderator access so I can see quite a lot of stuff on other accounts), that the Gravatar option has been deprecated. Existing accounts get to keep their gravatar currently set (I have one set), but no one without a gravatar set can switch to one. I have no official confirmation of this, I have no first-hand knowledge of this. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
4:18 PM
Actually, I should make voting decisions according to my own criteria and not yours. This has a good deal to do with what it actually means to voteβin any context. If a vote has a consequence then I think it ought to be considered. One of the consequences of this silly vote are these silly numbers which this change makes even sillier. Yes, changing the weight has an effect on the core judgement. Youβre calling for the core judgment to be a series of simplistic bijections when in fact they will be reported with a (apparently capricious) weight. I prefer my votes not contradict reality. — Trevor Reid 1 min ago
OP solicited feedback and mine has been given. I rarely comment on meta. As I said above I care very little about this change per se. As one of the vast sea of eyeballs whose attention SE sells for a living I can only tell the company this β keep doing things the way youβre doing them and youβll have less of my attention to sell. I doubt Iβm alone. But I hope it works out. Best. — Trevor Reid 1 min ago
4:40 PM
Can you not do it yourself by downloading the database or has that been stripped if the info? — gman 45 secs ago
@Kaiido If there were multiple downvotes, I would totally agree with you. In this case, it's just a single vote. — Brad 59 secs ago
@Tom Yes, I agree, I don't really want to clutter things up with another identical question. And, I don't want to encourage others to do so either, which is why I made this meta post. I'd rather that we resolve the issue. (If there are multiple downvotes, that's a bit different. That provides a stronger indication that there actually is a problem with the question. I don't think that a single downvote provides a strong enough indication.) — Brad 8 secs ago
@Brad Well a -1 indicates two things: someone bothered to downvote, but also that no one bothered to upvote. This deletion process isn't designed to delete "bad" questions, but ones with no interaction for 30 days, so no one answered and we could argue that OP doesn't seem to care that much either, since they didn't do anything for 30 days either. There might be (rare) cases where a question just didn't get that many views (thus fewer possible voters/answerers), but I assume the most questions deleted this way don't fall under this category. And for the other ones, there is the undelete vote. — Tom 38 secs ago
@Tom I agree that most questions deleted this way do seem to be abandoned. I disagree that they are a "annoyance", as the FAQ page states. I also feel strongly that Stack Overflow policies need to be flexible enough to allow smaller topics to flourish. There many topics where I find myself and maybe 3 or 4 others discussing regularly. Any policy related to a specific vote count or amount of time is more difficult to work with for those topics. (For example, closing questions, re-opening questions, migrating questions, etc. It rarely happens for these topics.) — Brad 1 min ago
5:30 PM
@Brad Well the question is then: how to you prevent roomba for low-traffic tags? Maybe add the view-count into consideration? But that includes all users, not one ones eligible to act (voting, answering etc.) on a question, i.e. people with an account. — Tom 37 secs ago
@Tom Seems complicated to apply to just low-traffic tags. I have a hunch that if Roomba were configured for a
-2
score rather than -1
, its positive effect would be similar to it is now, and less damage would be done to other questions. I'm curious if you agree with that, and if you know of any way to quantify it? — Brad 1 min ago@Brad Yivi gets notifications for each message by us, so we shouldn't discuss that under his answer anymore. But I would also guess we already have some results which you can add to your question (like the suggestion to decrease the required tag score to be eligible for roomba. Then we can clean the comments up :). — Tom 1 min ago
"Automatically re-open questions if a user starts a bounty on them.": offering a bounty on a closed question (or even deleted) isn't possible right now. This feature-request is discussed here: Give bounty to an answer in a closed question — Tom 1 min ago
@Tom Maybe the simplest thing then is just to have Roomba leave a comment (or notification? not sure how this works...) days before it does whatever it's going to do, giving users a poke to edit their question (the usually-required case), or to start a bounty (for cases like mine). — Brad 29 secs ago
That's honestly a pretty good idea, I like that. If then someone still doesn't act on their question, then it would be really dead/abandoned. Can you add that to the list of possible solutions? — Tom 15 secs ago
6:00 PM
6:14 PM
@DanNeely, yes, I'm aware about such feature, but IMHO it's a workaround, not a solution. The ideal way to solve it β to show a bigger form from the beginning or to allow to increase it like in Gmail. — Mike B. 28 secs ago
6:32 PM
It may be great to share the link to the app on Google Play so it's not mistaken for another. π
— nyedidikeke 50 secs ago
7:16 PM
Development on the mobile apps has been abandoned some time ago, AFAIK. No fixes nor new features will be forthcoming Iβm afraid. — yivi 27 secs ago
7:52 PM
Possible duplicate of What happened to the Stack Overflow app for Android? — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
Downvoters are already in action simply because they couldn't handle the facts. Good job! — Qudus 50 secs ago
2 hours later…
9:34 PM
I disagree. The best voted questions are simply the most asked questions (no matter how little effort is needed to find the answer). There is nothing wrong with this and is the reason Stackoverflow is my go-to Q&A source. Not because someone asked a brilliantly crafted question after first spending 28 weeks researching the issue. — java-addict301 1 min ago
9:56 PM
And the editor just ignores them is on a new line, and not part of the previous line. Double-space at the end doesn't create a new paragraph, it just means that the next line doesn't wrap around. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 7 secs ago
Reply to @Pieters, Double spaces have no effect on wrapping or line breaks, Its the ENTER key that forces a new line in the Body.....double, triple or any number of spaces get collapsed into one and text continues on same line without any affect from double spacing. — Bcwilmot 23 secs ago
The rule is that the double space appears at the end of a physical line. It is the double space in combination with a newline that signals the line break. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
10:34 PM
I thought we had these issues ironed out, but evidently not. Sorry about that. A few things are weird here - chief among them is that we don't have a history record in the DB that you were invited in the first place and I don't see any relevant exceptions. I probably won't have a chance to look into this until it auto-dismisses (that takes 3 days), but if you could give me some more information in the meantime, hopefully that'll help. When did this banner first appear for you? Are you blocking any cookies? If you click the X button, does a cookie called
ssb
get set and if so, what's in it? — Adam Lear ♦ 1 min ago10:48 PM
IIRC it wouldn't survive a page reload... so just to confirm, if you dismiss the banner, the cookie isn't set at that time either? — Adam Lear ♦ 56 secs ago
@AdamLear I think the banner appeared today (or maybe yesterday). I am not blocking any cookies that I am aware of. If I search the cookies in chrome related to stackoverflow.com, I get 7 cookies but none of them is called
ssb
. — Håkon Hægland 1 min agoNo it is not set as far as I can see. If I dismiss the banner one new cookie appeared in the list but it is not called
ssb
— Håkon Hægland 7 secs agoHmm. That's unfortunately unrelated to this feature. Interesting. Thanks for the info, I'll see what I can figure out. — Adam Lear ♦ 56 secs ago
OK - thanks for the clarification! I assumed the "approve tag wiki..." at 5,000 implied one could edit without approval. — Adrian - Reinstate Monica 52 secs ago
11:24 PM
@AhmadAlwareh - If you currently have a question ban, then creating a new account isnβt a solution, the system will detect that behavior and your new account will be automatically question banned. However, if you wait 6 months, and asked a higher quality question you might get enough votes to get out of the 6 month question ban system. Otherwise, posting positive contributions, participating in other activities (edit, review queues) will also help. — Security Hound 11 secs ago
CMs have a lot on their plate. It takes forever, we know... Be patient. After all it's just internet points. My strategy is: when I get downvoted, it gives me more energy to get a question and answer it, generally getting me some more rep. — Jean-François Fabre ♦ 1 min ago
« first day (107 days earlier) ← previous day next day → last day (1645 days later) »