00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00
3:03 PM
@Aaron - How exactly do you know the user who submitted the factually incorrect comment is the user who issued the downvote? — Security Hound 1 min ago
I looked into the
manage.py
thing-y a bit, and indeed, Miguel Grindberg does introduce a manage.py
script as an entry point for Flask-Script calls. Flask-Script has since been absorbed into Flask itself, and the script is no longer needed. The author wrote a blogpost about migrating your Flask-Script code in 2017. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 2 mins ago"Very similar to Question #2 so I'll defer to my answer there." - I'm once again going to address the elephant in the room and ask why. All your reviews in 2020 have been done in the past day - that doesn't show motivation, nor does it prove that you can. You sound more like you want to run for the diamond rather than the responsibility and work it comes with — Zoe 13 secs ago
Anywho, if I got a dime for every downvote I got on one of my answers that was accompanied by a comment that I think indicated that the commenter misunderstood something about my answer (rather than the answer being wrong), I'd not be very rich but I'd have some pocket money for a holiday or something. I can recommend taking a break from it all and enjoying life a bit! — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
In #1 and #2, you talk about silver linings and positive change, but what's positive for the direction of the site is of course subject to discussion and interpretation (some may even think some of our experienced long-term contributors leaving is positive). Could you elaborate on the positive things you see or expect to come out of these recent events? — Erik A 51 secs ago
@Patrice No again, there is barely anyone in support, perhaps 5 people over the years. That is the logical puzzle. It is strange that there are so few people in favor of a badge change, while the discussion point itself was considered during introduction, see above. Cody Gray also says "There is literally no advantage to adding all of that complexity to the badge requirements, and it would make the badge a lot less fun." while I do not see any complexity in making 1 day in 7 an unmonitored day (without accumulating "free" days). Instead of less fun, I'd see a good sign = more fun. — Lorenz 1 min ago
Your answers to #1 and #2 are short and to the point - and I like them! However, much of the rest of what you say comes across as, "I may do this or I may do that," without actually answering the questions. This, combined with your clear lack of past moderation activity, made this whole post rather reminiscent of some of those put out by 'senior' staff on Meta.SE when the whole ugly shebang of last year erupted. Lots of promises of new buildings but no concrete. — Adrian Mole 1 min ago
I'm not accepting your response to #10, since it doesn't actually address the question of motivation. I need to know if you're here to weather the storm or add this to your resume. — Makoto 31 secs ago
I see a discrimination against some people who care for a certain issue and also a discrimination against a not so little quantity of people who do not even know or care about what could also be better in the end for them. It could be a nice sign that SO states, and no one would be harmed. That is why the opposition here has not convinced me. — Lorenz 1 min ago
re question 3: "In general, it's my belief high-rep users should be held to a higher standard than low-rep users. High-rep users are often looked up to and should strive to set great examples. Using the platform for overt personal gain sets a bad example. We're here to help and learn from each other." - so basically, you plan to discriminate between low-rep users and high-rep users actively? Even high-rep users can use the platform for their own gains - if you're running to add this to your resume (as Makoto asked about), then you're arguably included in that group — Zoe 28 secs ago
Not a bug... They're two completely separate features. You can use them independently of each other. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
I have just noticed that the question has been closed, without a reason, no feedback. There are other people inside the community who decide top-down here and have no issue with that. This question is in itself a justified question, especially if top-down decisions have happened in the past. No matter what the aim here, closing is just showing that the community is not tolerant towards an exceptional development. If I now contact the links stated here as an exception, why not letting this question open? I should almost open a question on this, but it has been time enough now for all parties. — Lorenz 1 min ago
Re question 6: "Personally, I would review the comment chain, review what the person has been accused of, and the relevant code of conduct. Try to" - try to what? Assume good faith, or suspend and move on? You've covered the standard investigation part, but not the action you'd actually take — Zoe 1 min ago
This added incentive could potentially drive more users to complete given tasks. --> probably to cheat more. We already have a lot of Robo-Reviewer clicking buttons inside the different queues to earn badges. Having reputation will make this worse. — Temani Afif 7 secs ago
Actually when you hover over the downvote arrow, the tooltip is "This answer is not useful" .. so how come you say thanks to it ? — Ahmed Hussein 16 secs ago
Since I get the feeling there's a desire to get rid of that access-vba tag and be done with this once and for all, I could try a bot-assisted edit spree, simple remove access-vba, add ms-access if not added yet, add vba if not added yet, list if tag limit of 5 would be exceeded, then manually review the ones that get listed. I've done a little work with OAuth APIs and it shouldn't be too hard I guess if I get the bot approved for write access. Would either of you condone that? — Erik A 1 min ago
Re question 7: you avoid the question in both of these, but the arguably most concerning one to talk your way around is the second part of that question. The question explicitly states "one which you personally disagreed with, and felt was bad for the community at large?", but still talk about it like it's a harmless feature that you think you could stand through. Would you still act like you claim you would if you see this new thing as very bad for the community, and something you very strongly disagree with? — Zoe 1 min ago
How? could you explain why someone can downvote and say thanks to the same thing? — Ahmed Hussein 1 min ago
I'm sorry, what? Badges themselves are meant to be a reward. Why do we need to double up on the reward by also giving reputation? — Cody Gray ♦ 26 secs ago
These badges are nothing more than a goodwill token for interacting with the site (regardless of content usually). Reputation is roughly a measurement of how much useful content one has provided. Why should one be awarded reputation for the interaction alone? — StoryTeller - Unslander Monica 38 secs ago
to earn answer-based badges you need to get reputation so reputation leads to the badge why you want the opposite? — Temani Afif 51 secs ago
@Lorenz As always, the feedback on closed questions is displayed in the giant blue box. You aren't asking for input from the community, so this is not on-topic for Meta. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Yes, you slice off some of your own hard-earned reputation in order to "feature" your question for a week. How is the bounty system related to this? — Cody Gray ♦ 51 secs ago
Yeah, that's what Catija just suggested, @rene. Seems logical. I can remove that synonym, except that SO just went "offline for maintenance"... — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
@CodyGray I know that blue box and I read it, I thought that (private feedback) at the bottom would still be filled afterwards if that was used as an item, while I thought the other feedback to be public. Then I understand your point for closing, and my point for "reopening" is that I got input from the community here, so the statement that I did not ask for input from the community is wrong. The answers - not the comments and the long discussion - are actually what the question was about, I was asking for input from the community from the start. — Lorenz 1 min ago
Re question 6: "It's really, really difficult to categorically answer generalized situations like this. So much of it depends on the context, previous comments, people involved, and more" - like what? I understand it's hard to state exactly what action you'd take, but what considerations you make for different actions are extremely important (and yes, even the things you consider obvious) — Zoe 58 secs ago
Re question 6: the question still stands. What action would you take, and what considerations would you make when taking action? Doesn't have to be 100% accurate down to each mod letter character - a general overview of the different options is more than enough to actually answer the question, rather than answering by not answering — Zoe 1 min ago
4:13 PM
@ErikA: I'd start with a data.stackexchange.com query to list posts with 5 tags. However, I'd not recommend editing by bot without a lot of conservative rate limiting and checks at regular intervals; we've had people try that and break a lot of posts by accident because they got their HTML quoting mixed up, for example. The CMs talked about getting a dev on board for tasks like these, so lets not jump the gun just yet. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 41 secs ago
4:45 PM
Also, the
lang-default
highlighting is better than nothing. Would it be a bad idea to automatically apply lang-default
highlighting to GAP-system tagged questions? — Mike Pierce 1 min agoRe #2, I don't think "don't think about the past" is going to cut it. Things have changed in the last year. Moderators have left and the ones still remaining have lost the morale to continue janitorial duties. The flag queue is bursting and custom flags are not being handled as often, with months of backlog piling up. 2020 is vastly different from 2018 when you last ran. With your history of sporadic moderation, can you make a difference in these trying times? — cs95 1 min ago
Oh, well now I still feel silly. Does the default highlighting just know to highlight Capitalized names as functions? (see here for an example post). — Mike Pierce 1 min ago
@Lorenz - you have asked for input on how to avoid community input (hence the paradox reference in my other comment) which is likely why the question is closed by 5 people with the priviledge. Please note that you still got valid (!) responses on what you can do which should be a further evidence that one should not seek top-down solutions but confer with the community at large instead. — Oleg Valter 41 secs ago
Disagreement does equal personal attack. If you want to be a member of a community and not go crazy, consider learning to live with the fact that not everyone does or should agree with you. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
Oh rereading your answer, maybe I should say explicitly the default highlighting has been
none
, not default
. — Mike Pierce 19 secs ago@Braiam: I responded to it at the time, and thought you'd seen it then. You didn't qualify your sentiment, and I noted that you have zero stake in this tag so I'm not sure why you commented. Last but not least, the job was started 2 years ago, I just finished it, and overall the response has been very positive. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 38 secs ago
@Braiam: so, once again: I'll be cleaning up your comment in a few minutes, as I fail to see what purpose it serves here. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 5 secs ago
@Braiam: Also, I acknowledge in my answer that there were people against this. I'm not going to go over the whole discussion again, as it was a never ending tug of war, and we needed that tug of war to end. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
@OlegValter I do see the given answers as a hint that this community is OK, of course I see your point. I cannot complain so much now. The time and attention that was spent here on short notice by the various community members including the helpful answers is considerable and a clear plus. I would still see the question as valid inside a community that thinks around the corner and tolerates people who try to go around the community after some experience inside the community, a last level option. Which I would even see as part of the community, even if it were to happen top-down (I stop now :). — Lorenz 36 secs ago
@MartijnPieters Of course, I don't intend to break the site. There are 101 posts that would end up with 6 tags after removing access-vba and adding ms-access and vba, these. That's certainly manageable, and the actual number is likely lower after merging excel-vba, which doesn't yet affect SEDE. — Erik A 36 secs ago
"No one would be harmed"? I believe your last attempt at bringing this up pointed out that everyone who already has the badge and earned it the hard way would be harmed by the cheapening of it. This seems like such a quixotic windmill to tilt at; it's a badge. It doesn't offer reputation, it doesn't make using the site easier, nothing at all. — fbueckert 1 min ago
@ErikA: a bit more SQL wrangling could exclude the
excel
+ excel-vba
or access-vba
+ vba
posts from that result :-P But that's a very manageable list to do manually. I found that 5-tag posts invariably were over-using tags, cramming the top-5 keywords from the post in there. I never had issues trimming them down, sometimes all the way to just excel
and vba
(yes, you have an issue with your VBA code, and you used if
, and while
and actual variables in your code, but your question is not about if statements, while loops or variables!). — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago5:25 PM
Most tags attract general software users, not just Excel. You can find examples like the ones you found across the site,
excel
is not an exception here. I must again note that I fail to see what actual experience you have in these tags, you have 0 answers to posts relating to VBA or Excel, and you haven't been active in the review queues for a year now. Do you have any empirical evidence here? — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago@MikePierce I have written an answer on what lang-default does: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/327677/578411 — rene 1 min ago
New users need tooling to help them so that we can get them better help while at the same time preventing deletion-requiring content from overwhelming our curators. I know this isn't an issue a moderator can solve, but that is what the community does need, and I have said this is various other places as well. Obviously that is something we will just have to voice our collective concerns about over time and hope the team can actually invest locally here in the platform instead of externally by trying to create the next best thing. — Travis J 44 secs ago
Our focus should remain on encouraging the quality content being produced, and we should acknowledge that those dozen views are not worth our time to address. It is good enough as it stands, and there is progress to made in other places. New user experience for example is probably one of the better places to start. The issue is that we need to balance both sides, the curation and the creation. It is best to prevent a leak than to constantly mop it up or catch it in a bucket. — Travis J 47 secs ago
@Trilarion - Well, the answer to that in my opinion is no, it will never be enough. Don't get too caught up on that though, because it is important to keep in mind that this content occupies real estate in an online environment which comes with several advantages. Firstly, if someone reproduces half of lorem ipsum with some gibberish, Google (or your search engine of choice) will never find it. Given a year that post even if left open will only have a dozen views. — Travis J 54 secs ago
5:59 PM
Correct - ultimately this is an architectural decision to not add a query to the question page. — Nick Craver ♦ 8 secs ago
@Lorenz - please do not use the word "discrimination" unless you are ready to back it up. This is a heavy accusation (borderline of CoC breach) and should not be said lightly. That said, one that feels discriminated usually calls for an arbiter. Moderators are properly elected arbiters in such cases, at least two of which engaged with you and both judged the same as others. If you still disagree, it is understandable that you would want to call a higher arbiter, which is the company, but be prepared that the decision might not be in your favour. — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
6:17 PM
@MartijnPieters the empirical evidence is the top post of the other question that you decided that it wasn't relevant. That they were against this. I'm unsure if users can see my votes, but I assure you that I've voting to close questions. — Braiam 15 secs ago
BTW, @MartijnPieters the phrase about the beard of your neighbor burning was about using the experiences of others to see how they apply to your environment. I am sure as heck you would be against this if it was the python tag with their versions. — Braiam 12 secs ago
@ErikA no please, there is enough damage about this, don't get other tags involved! — Braiam 23 secs ago
6:35 PM
@Braiam The decision has been made, two years ago. While I still doubt if it was the best one, it got massively upvoted, so I've made my peace with it (and still struggled a little when there were lots of access-vba edits, but excel-vba was still there). Letting access-vba survive will just cause confusion (why is there an access-vba tag but not an excel-vba one and things like that). Keeping the status-quo with excel-vba gone and access-vba in limbo serves no-one imo. — Erik A 1 min ago
@FedericoDorato: I don't have any information as to whether mods would welcome those flags, and personally speaking I would not flag in this case (as this is generally meant to be a case that the community can handle without a moderator). However, you can always try it, and the worse that will happen is that the flag would be declined. — halfer 44 secs ago
Alternatively, participate in the site more and gain enough reputation elsewhere so you can leave a comment on the answer. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 17 secs ago
Of course, it may be worth searching this Meta site to see if anyone has asked a question about getting rid of the restriction that questions can only be flagged as duplicates if there is an upvoted answer. Cody indicates in the comments that he doesn't like that rule, and mods are not subject to it, so I suspect there will be a proportion of the community that would be open to it. If the topic has never been raised before (doubtful but possible) then you can always create a new feature-suggestion topic on it. — halfer 35 secs ago
You can't. If an answer is wrong, see it as an opportunity to post a better answer if your edit was rejected. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
When they said to contact the author, I assume they meant via comment which you do have enough reputation for. — John Montgomery 1 min ago
A moderator should consider sending a message to the user who approved the edit... — Heretic Monkey 32 secs ago
The answer wasn't wrong, per se -- it just had a unintentional bug. I did end up commenting, and am hoping the original author will update the answer. But not being able to respond to the rejection directly seems very strange. — Kevin Meboe 1 min ago
It's always so ironic to me that questions about comments-as-answers always wind up with a bunch of upvoted comment-answers. — scohe001 36 secs ago
Rubén - given that we do not have a disagreement over what you propose for the expansion of the tag wiki - shouldn't we make an update based on your answer? I am ok with doing that to help lift the burden a little once I have a free suggested edit slot — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
@CodyGray I have added this sede query also to the answer and that query shows the tagsynonyms that block the creation of tfs-version tags. — rene 1 min ago
7:17 PM
I am still willing to be convinced. Sometimes the community could be wrong; if empirical evidence says this is actually effective, then I rather not ignore that. I am sceptical, but I have been wrong in the past. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 46 secs ago
@HereticMonkey The edit was good. I don't mean to sound disrespectful, but anyone who understands C#/MailMessage will be able to see that. But my question is not about the correctness of the edit. — Kevin Meboe 1 min ago
The edit was not good. You should not be editing code to correct mistakes. I know C# and
MailMessage
just fine, but I wouldn't edit the code. I would comment on the answer to bring the errors that would come up due to that code up with the answerer, giving them a chance to edit it themselves. If they chose not to edit, I'd add an answer, giving credit to the original answer, with the corrected code. The rejection was correct. — Heretic Monkey 12 secs ago@HereticMonkey According to stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/edit, you can edit "to correct minor mistakes". The bug in the code was just a small part of the overall answer. To me, as a more rookie stackoverflow user, it seemed simplest to just correct the bug and move on. — Kevin Meboe 1 min ago
@Lorenz don't dodge my question plz. What number would make you say 'oh, that support makes it logical then. Enough ppl support me. I'll back off now'. My initial feeling was 'that number will never come up, he'll do more mental gymnastics to avoid it's... And see what your answer was. — Patrice 15 secs ago
I'm still salty that they rejected your requests for reinstatement. You were already community elected once, it's obnoxious that they're making you have to get community elected a second time, and that in doing so you'll be taking up a spot where a new first-time moderator could be joining the team. Hopefully you'll get that diamond back soon enough! — Davy M 1 min ago
Honestly I'm inclined to think this is a good edit not a bad edit. Clearly conflicts with the author's intent is a bit of a judgement call and in this case I would say it does not. As far as adding another answer, I suspect the reality is that most stack overflow visitors just copypasta the top-rated answer and never scroll down to see the corrections, and maybe never notice they have a bug until much later. So I might have approved this. — dbc 24 secs ago
@HereticMonkey - I would not report the review as bad. Even if if you don't agree with the review, Clearly conflicts with the author's intent is a bit of a judgement call. chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/208985/bad-stack-overflow-reviews should be used for blatantly bad reviews like approving a non-English post in Triage or First Posts (which I see pretty often). — dbc 1 min ago
@RobertHarvey (and dbc) Thanks, guys. My brain is still spinning from all of this -- from quick downvotes, to arguments against my edit, all from users with a lot of reputation. Even though I love Stack Overflow, I clearly have a lot to learn when it comes to the meta. I guess the answer to my posted question here is that there's no way to respond to users or rejected edits. If someone wants to write that in an answer here, I'll mark it as the accepted answer. — Kevin Meboe 36 secs ago
To be convinced, I'd require an analysis into the user experience as well, not just metrics with regards to voting and commenting. Yes, the meta community is not equal to the entire community, even though the 0.015% has been retracted, but the site should not prioritize avoiding thanks comments (which are a minor annoyance at best imo) over providing a good user experience and not overloading the user with up to three actions (upvote + accept + thank) they could take on a good answer on their question, with all slightly different effects which are non-obvious to new users. — Erik A 48 secs ago
Life gets a lot better once you have 2000 rep and can make edits unilaterally. Now if only Stack Exchange would fix the editing system so that, as a privileged editor, I could bypass a suggested edit without being placed into the same edit approval queue as everyone else. — Robert Harvey 1 min ago
Only speculating here, but you might have gotten downvotes because your question title sounds a little like How do I request a Stack Overflow user to answer my question?, to which the answer is You don't. A title like What should I do after a minor code fix to an answer was rejected as being too major might have gone over better. — dbc 1 min ago
@pppery can you please expand on this for my benefit? I couldn't find any way to contact the user (as suggested by an editor) in the UI, so I asked the community. What was the premise that you disagreed with? — Kevin Meboe 1 min ago
@pppery Okay, thank you. I do think users should feel free to upvote/downvote as they please. Since my question only tangentially dealt with the correctness of my edit, I don't agree with the downvote -- but I respect your right to make it, and I appreciate you clarifying the reason. — Kevin Meboe 1 min ago
8:37 PM
@RobertHarvey I can dream. As for your wish, more clicks means more job security! ...or something. — Kevin Meboe 1 min ago
9:01 PM
Lewis, changes to the gamification system are often met with some sort of initial resistance and inertia, even before a thorough critical analysis. It's an established trade-off; people familiar with the system can't ignore that gamification can be an (ideally secondary) incentive, and that it also enables forms of inevitable abuse. As a result, you have to provide evidence that a certain change will be extraordinarily beneficial with little cost and effort, even though most agree that the current system could be improved in one way or another. Thought experiments don't fly here unfortunately. — M.A.R. 1 min ago
9:21 PM
@M-- I'm not sure what your comment is saying. You're arguing neurological/physical addiction is a good thing? — TylerH 43 secs ago
@TylerH surely not. I am saying if you want your product to attract more people, that's a strategy to consider. — M-- 31 secs ago
10:09 PM
"ask if it could be appropriate and on-topic for you, the experts who the author decided to ask. Be a bit jealous of your site – don’t blithely turn askers away simply because their question could be asked somewhere else. Don’t hit them over the head with your scope, help them tailor their question to fit into it – and if that means your site’s scope overlaps a bit with another site’s, so be it..." (Respect the community – your own, and others’) — gnat 1 min ago
10:25 PM
So I'm going to say this out loud. I don't believe that you should be a moderator again. I won't disagree that you did a pretty decent job with certain moderation tasks, but you have left an impression that in my head makes you a bit harder to work with than other mods. In the mix of the whole Monica-Chipps fiasco, you were quicker to take offense than most. You've got thick skin and you've got the ability to get the job done, but I need a moderator that will try to desperately advocate for what we need here. I don't see you as that person. — Makoto 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? Disable the red dot on the Review Queue and add a link to /review — Nick 56 secs ago
10:59 PM
The issue was not necessarily with your edit, but a previous edit which added that even though there are overloads for MailMessage that take either string, string, or, MailAddress, MailAddress... That send, senders won't necessarily have domain knowledge, so if making code edits it can sometimes be helpful to leave a link to relevant documentation (or any other previous bad edits) in your edit summary — Nick 59 secs ago
1 hour later…
00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00
« first day (342 days earlier) ← previous day next day → last day (1385 days later) »