12:07 AM
@Tracy I saw that quote the first time you posted it. You seem to think that line in the privileges page is the only guidance that exists on voting. Another location in the help center that denotes another way votes are used is here: Voting is different on Meta: "For most posts, votes reflect the perceived usefulness." — Davy M just now
Additionally, the tooltip which I already told you was my source for that says "This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful." Using "or" means that any of the individual reasons are each sufficient alone to downvote the question, it would need to say "and" for it to not be sufficient alone. — Davy M 1 min ago
12:35 AM
1:05 AM
You should not be abusing comment flags as a way to remove comments that you personally dislike or disagree with. — Cody Gray ♦ 12 secs ago
1:17 AM
I’ve merged [
bert
] into [bert-language-model
], after retagging the (very few) non-nlp posts. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
2 hours later…
3:21 AM
The comment is obviously weird and it's not very constructive. What is the OP supposed to do then, just follow the recommentation? That was not his question in the first place. But I don't think it must be removed. It's an on-topic, opinion-based comment, which has this "rant" vibe to it. I think the decision to remove it is opinion-based itself; IMO it should be because it just doesn't fit SO well. — akuzminykh 1 min ago
I've read that article. Actually, I've studied it in detail. It has severe fundamental methodological problems, and its conclusions are therefore altogether unjustified. Several other ad hoc studies have also found the opposite conclusion, as does most of what we see as moderators, which further calls the conclusions of that article into question. Aside from that, I have a very real problem with making females out to be weak and victims. It re-entrenches the very power disparities that are ostensibly being decried. There's no evidence whatsoever of systematic oppression. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Not all comments are designed to give the OP advice, @akuzminykh. They may give advice to others who come across the same question but aren't operating under the same constraints. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
I think this is similar to the LMGTFY-problem. I assume that when someone links to a homework service then the intention is to let the OP know his question is not for SO in a very expressive way. I think just telling the OP that SO is not a homework service is enough; no need to be "rude" like that. — akuzminykh 1 min ago
@CodyGray This is true, but then I think there should be a seperate question that has the Anaconda thing as it's topic. Then you could link to it, and that's it: no long comment. I mean it's not very QAish when there are details and opinions scattered all over the place. It's of course useful to have valuable side notes ... but yeah, in this case here, I just don't think that is one of those. — akuzminykh 7 secs ago
Comments are "QAish" at all. And link-only comments aren't much of an improvement over this. — Cody Gray ♦ just now
@StephenC Yes, I fully agree. Those reasons just add to the fact that such comments don't help the OP or SO. It would just add a weird facet to the whole SO character, when new users get responses like that by the community. And actively harmful links are obviously the worst case. — akuzminykh 34 secs ago
2 hours later…
5:39 AM
There's one more thing which just doesn't sit right with me. You say "And just to clarify, my question wasn't meant to be insulting to anyone." We're trying to clarify that downvotes aren't meant to be insulting to anyone, but you continue to insist they are bullying. Why not give us the same consideration you're asking for instead of insisting that we're all wrong about what votes are? — Davy M 25 secs ago
6:27 AM
Congratulations Makyen and Machavity! I'm sure SO will have not just cleaner Q&A, but also more community supports :) — Eriawan Kusumawardhono 1 min ago
7:53 AM
@BhargavRao if blacklisting requires SE staff involvement, should this be tagged status-review? — gnat 1 min ago
8:45 AM
9:05 AM
@d4rk4ng31 don't mention - my hobby of sorts :) On a serious note: the data shows that no-code questions from very low-rep users fare surprisingly ok, even I expected a higher number, so it is likely that the issue is not as bad as it seems. — Oleg Valter 30 secs ago
9:19 AM
9:45 AM
It's a shame that a very valid feature request like this has received many upvotes, and languishes here, for years. I find this very frustrating in 2020. Having probably flagged somewhere in the region of 4000 questions as NAA and been declined on a handful of them, I don't need 'general education' on the use of the flag, but I find it very frustrating when a flag is declined and the answer is deleted so I can't see why someone might have made that decision. — David Buck 1 min ago
Because not two users are alike. Some users are nicer than others. With this many users you'll find users of every kind. If you find a meaner comment, just flag it. — yivi 5 secs ago
Can you provide some examples of "dumb questions" that have received condescending comments? — F1Krazy 54 secs ago
1) It is very easy to interpret someone's comment as condescending. Whether or not it was intended that way. 2) It is not OK to ask smart people dumb questions without at least trying to do some research first. — Stephen C 2 mins ago
You do not need to point out users. You could provide example comments. But discussing this as a generic "problem" is very hard. If that's what you want, the suggested dupe is a good enough answer. — yivi 33 secs ago
Unbelievable, This very question is getting downvotes. Well, how am I supposed to know this is a duplicate question? Did you check the wording of both questions? AND YES< I DID TRY SEARCHING FOR A SIMILAR QUESTION !!! — JaySabir 8 secs ago
@CodyGray would you agree that comment is written not only in a way that expresses person's opinion, but also in a way that invites others to start opinion based discussion? If yes - wouldn't it be better to discourage "internet wars" starting with the person who's (maybe indirectly) encouraging others to join one? — Dmitrii Z. 53 secs ago
I wouldn't have asked the same question. I believe the answer to this question is my first comment. "Why some users do X", because people are not all the same, and with enough users you'll get a bit of everything. There are other possible questions related to yours: e.g. by providing specific examples to see if the community agrees with you that those comments were condescending or not (but in any case, the answer is the same, flag and move on), or a more involved question providing data to try to see if there is real problem, or if these are isolated cases. — yivi 1 min ago
Just so you're aware, if you're asking about a question on the Electronics Stack Exchange, you should ask on the Electronics Meta, not the Stack Overflow Meta. If you're asking about users' behaviour on the network as a whole, you should ask on Meta Stack Exchange. — F1Krazy 14 secs ago
By saying dumb questions, I literally just came across a question that was a legitimate genuine problem in the electronics StackExchange site. The first two comments were just mean. and they didn't even explain why it is a bad idea. — JaySabir 2 mins ago
10:49 AM
It seems to be for questions about fine-tuning of machine learning models. The tag doesn't have usage guidance but the questions do seem to be about that topic. — kaya3 13 secs ago
Well, the questions with that tag don't seem to be lacking upvotes. If you think they are low quality then I invite you to downvote them instead. — kaya3 19 secs ago
11:03 AM
I have seen comments that are condescending. That new user will be scared to ask a question again for sure. This isn't constructive at all — JaySabir 48 secs ago
@JaySabir I've gone through a decent amount of recent questions on EE.se and checked their comments. I might have grown accustomed to the meanness around the SE network but I didn't find evidence of your claim. If you go forward and want to bring this to the attention of the community on Electronics.se I suggest you prepare a meta post for their meta with examples of the comments that you feel are off and include an explanation why the comment is troublesome for you. If the community has grown a blind spot it might need some convincing that we're doing it wrong. That might fail on the 1st try. — rene 1 min ago
I've burned down 15, but have to focus on other things. If it is still there when I have time again, I'll burn it down further, but feel free to just edit these posts and vote to close where appropriate. It's a very small number of posts now. Ask for help in the SOCVR room if you need to muster closing support! — Martijn Pieters ♦ 1 min ago
11:49 AM
Continually asking the same, dumb questions, over, and over, of volunteer smart people is abuse. If you wish to ask questions without prior research, you need a teacher or a freelancer:( — Martin James 31 secs ago
'I will not point out users but there are a lot of them'.. I do not believe you. Convince me otherwise, with EVIDENCE. — Martin James 16 secs ago
12:17 PM
I agree that we should burninate this tag. It’s like Nuke and blacklist all of the tags for fundamental programming concepts. “Fine tuning” is a fundamental concept of machine learning, so it’s too generic as a tag if the question already contains machine-learning or a variant of that. It doesn’t really tell us what the question is about, other than machine learning, but there’s a tag for that. — user4642212 1 min ago
1:37 PM
@HereticMonkey Why should it be clear? I have not said it would be. It is in the context of the question. I needed to install 32bit JDK short before July. The last Oracle JDK supporting 32bit was JDK8. Then I read that vscode would not support JDK8 from July on. I could have asked now "how to use JDK8 after the change", but instead, I have changed the question towards a workaround. This is all explained in the body question, but not in the header. And this was the whole reason to raise this idea as well, to support unclear but potentially important issues (header or body or answers). — Lorenz 8 secs ago
@SecurityHound Even if you were right here, I am not the one who had to know this. On the vscode java project website, it was announced since April, that from July on, JDK11 would be needed. Have a look at the same github.com/redhat-developer/vscode-java/wiki/…, which is slightly changed now: "Since vscode-java 0.65.0, Java 11 is the minimum required version." And why should it be an urgent topic on github? I do not know where you got your information. — Lorenz 47 secs ago
@SecurityHound That is for Ecplipse, not for vscode, as far as I can see? But really, even if you were right, it is not important. This thread is not about discussing what is now. It is about the potential that is in some unclear questions (header/body/answers). And if the announcement by vscode from April on was that in July, JDK 8 would not be supported anymore, then we talk about such a state, not about what may be possible now. The pinned issue #1543 at github.com/redhat-developer/vscode-java/issues serves to see how this was discussed. — Lorenz 34 secs ago
@SecurityHound OK, then you ARE right about it, and still what I said before counts. This gibhub issue only exists since 12 days. I refer to a situation where the issue did not exist, where I accidentally read about the JDK8 change, and where I tried to get a workaround for my 32bit problem (which in the end was relevant for JDK8 64 bit users as well, even if now there seems to be a workaround according to the github discussion). And mind, this is about the evolution of topics that might be hidden in closed questions, not about the example to be on- or off-topic. — Lorenz 19 secs ago
@Lorenz - I see no benefit of keeping out of scope questions, just so people who are uninformed about our rules, can vote to indicate it's useful. Just because it's useful does not mean it's within scope. — Security Hound 1 min ago
@SecurityHound It is your good point to state this, this is appreciated! This is a discussion about an idea. fbueckert 80 % convinces me as well. But if your last comment and that of fbueckert are the only ones who seem to actually catch the idea and then answer, it is too little of a real discussion. I come back here after two days, finding the example (!!) question strongly downvoted and deleted, with even comments in it deleted. This idea was also strongly downvoted, while most of the comments do not show to have understood the idea at all. — Lorenz 1 min ago
I will say again; if most of the comments show that most people do not understand the idea, then perhaps you should edit the explanation of the idea. In other words; maybe it's not us, maybe it's you? — Heretic Monkey 23 secs ago
@HereticMonkey I see that I should have added the body text of the example since I cannot ask from readers to click on the links only to understand the question. Nevertheless, all the rest shows me that there is a vast amount of members here who are ready to downvote quickly whatever is not clear in a minute. Which is their good right, of course. — Lorenz 1 min ago
2:43 PM
1st and foremost i value my free time and wouldn't want to commit that much of it to a resource i don't feel confident in, regardless of compensation... but also there are certain personalities I'd rather not come in contact with. It's just a source of stress/anxiety i'd rather not need to deal with. — Kevin B 23 secs ago
3:09 PM
3:39 PM
For the description, I don t have work experience so I can t add such thing. — user2284570 1 min ago
No reputation gain/loss for upvotes/downvotes on meta. Editing is an integral part of SO. If you have 2000 reputation, you can edit posts directly, with lower reputation you can only suggest edits. The author of a post can roll back edits (or accept/reject suggested edits), but only do this if you feel the edit is not useful. We are all volunteers here, so editors do not have to also write an answer (and if it's about this question) you received an answer before it was edited. — Jeanne Dark 57 secs ago
I've edited this question, because the name of the site is not "stackoverflow" but rather "Stack Overflow". I've also fixed some phrases and words that were awkward or nonsensical. I certainly used my understanding of the text to do that -- I'm not sure who else's an editor can use. As far as explaining all of the changes made, that would be exhausting, and we have English Language & Usage and English Language Learners for that. — Heretic Monkey 1 min ago
The question is a bit confusing. It's about third-party edits, right? There seems to be a lot of exposition about non-completely relevant issues and background. Please try to focus your question, and edit the question title to it actually reflects what the question is about. — yivi 59 secs ago
@Jeanne Dark Thank you for these details, and I am of course aware that everyone is volunteers and I know the personal time that it can take — Mirabeau 27 secs ago
Does this answer your question? How to handle edits you think shouldn't have been made — gnat 21 secs ago
The question is edited, the whole added example was dropped in order to make it simpler: it is to make clear that the idea is not about the any precise example case. The example was also too unclear and might have distracted readers or perhaps mixed up votes from the thread here and the example there. — Lorenz 1 min ago
a simple example of my questioning ... my message has been corrected several times, mainly for corrections due to my poor English ... thank you to them. But here ... deleting sentences squarely, that's what I don't really understand (!) link — Mirabeau 37 secs ago
The question is edited, the whole added example was dropped in order to make it simpler: it is to make clear that the idea hopefully does not need and is not about any precise example. The previously used example was also too unclear and might have distracted readers or perhaps mixed up votes from the thread here and the example there. In my opinion, the answers of fbueckert and SecurityHound are already convincing enough, more or less stating that the idea here might lead new users away from the strict rules SO needs to be efficient in the long run. — Lorenz 1 min ago
@Mirabeau: The sentences were simply useless. They didn't add any additional information to the question. Especially "thank you" and alike should be removed. If you want to improve your writing and make it easier for people to understand you, use shorter sentences and stop using "..." all over the place. This makes it really hard to follow. You also might want to read the FAQ section about editing. — BDL 1 min ago
Write your own answer. Downvote the other answer if you think it's wrong. — Robert Longson 16 secs ago
@BDL Thanking someone is far from being "noise", it must be cultural, it is a personal opinion, but I will learn to adapt myself, and only, coldly, consume — Mirabeau 26 secs ago
Not even that. Doing such thing involves finding a company, which is the first reason I m creating the profile. — user2284570 19 secs ago
5:13 PM
@Mirabeau think of Stack Overflow as professional documentation or a professional FAQ guide for the language you want to use. Would you ever considering thanking people when writing such a guide? — psubsee2003 1 min ago
I guess the main thing with that edit is that tt does look like you're potentially removing information... curiously (and somewhat ironically) that statement wasn't in the original post by the OP. It got added in by an approved suggested edit... — Jon Clements ♦ 1 min ago
5:49 PM
This is more a comment than an answer. Some references would help. Well, at least you got post ID 400000, so congratulations! — user4642212 1 min ago
I would say that if the user is no longer available, even more caution should be used in altering that user's posts. If they are available, they are capable of unilaterally rejecting edits if they don't agree with them. If they're not, their intent has no defense. And, for the most part, would-be editors have an easy course set out for them: add another answer, with the edits and appropriate attribution. — Heretic Monkey 59 secs ago
Indeed, seen from this approach, it seems logical, on the other hand, and by remaining in the same example, I do not see myself an editorial staff where everyone changes the content only based on their vision of things, their logic, their understanding, which remains somewhere very personal even if it can sometimes make sense. It is this notion that can be disturbing (for a new user), I persist in thinking that the true truth cannot be seen from an individual vision but collectively, — Mirabeau 1 min ago
@gnat I didn't make any edit to the code so that question is not relevant to this; moreover that discussion doesn't mention anything about editing inaccurate statements. — Anakhand 40 secs ago
@RobertLongson That does make sense, but in the spirit of "SO is a repository of useful questions and answers", a direct edit to a highly-voted answer has a higher impact (for better) on the quality of the Q&A. Also, that addresses the question of inaccurate info, but what about making a useful addition? (See the second example, at the bottom of my question) — Anakhand 1 min ago
@HereticMonkey Sure, the author's intent has no defense, but then again what is inherently good about defending the exact intent and beliefs of the author? (As opposed to maintaining the general idea/approach, and improving upon it). SO should be a repository of useful and accurate information, and not some kind of forum for self-expression or a collection of technical essays. (I, for one, would gladly accept someone correcting an obvious mistake I made in an answer.) — Anakhand 19 secs ago
your edit attempted to remove part that specified when proposed code is valid, which many reviewers (me included) would qualify as intervention into the code. Not to mention that formally edit suggestion contained removal of the (supplementary) code:
df.sort_index()
— gnat 16 secs ago@gnat Still, is there any "do" or "don't" in the section named "Editing code in Answers" that is relevant to this edit? Maybe the only one that is somewhat related (and still a bit of a stretch) is "[Don't] Make the code do something different than what the answer says it does". I definitely didn't do that, the code with or without the
df.sort_index()
does exactly the same, precisely due to the falsehood of that statement. — Anakhand 54 secs agoAs Jon points out and has rectified, the scenario is that OP's edit effectively reverts an inaccurate edit that should never have been approved in the first place. The new edit proposal does match OP's intent simply because it removes information that OP never intended to be in the post in the first place. — ggorlen 34 secs ago
7:01 PM
I hate to spoil the fun here, but why are we not following the burnination due process in this case? The tag had > 50 questions and unless anyone here has an "authoritative knowledge of all technologies relevant" (in which case I apologize) I am at a loss why there is no prior discussion — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
However, had this inaccuracy been contained in the original answer rather than in a wrongly-approved edit, then the correction would conflict with intent, even if it fixes an obvious mistake, and should be rejected and left as a comment, downvote and/or other answer. — ggorlen 12 secs ago
8:07 PM
Using [status-review] is a good way to get SE staff attention, @gnat, that's true. However for this particular post, I'm not sure whether it needs to be escalated or not. — Bhargav Rao ♦ 34 secs ago
8:21 PM
@BhargavRao I also pondered whether it is worth it. However after noticing that this is 4th burnination effort for this tag (prior attempts are listed in the opening reference) and that total amount of upvotes on these is now well over 200 I decided to propose that. Looks like in this particular case small dev effort would save us quite a bit of meta hassle and trouble — gnat 30 secs ago
8:33 PM
@gnat The issue is that blacklists are implemented on SE using regexes, so there's a performance hit when they add blacklists. That's the reason why staff are reluctant to add more to the blacklists. SE needs to re-architect the way tag blacklists are handled. Anyway, there's a tool by SOBotics to check tags that have resurfaced, I used to keep an eye on that daily until Sep last year. Martijn and other mods were checking that recently, and have handled a lot of the tags. (I'm still not completely back into tag moderation for now) — Bhargav Rao ♦ 26 secs ago
9:15 PM
Or rename jestjs to jest-framework, jest to java-elasticsearch or something like that, and remove jest. — oguz ismail 49 secs ago
9:55 PM
@OlegValter The tag failed all four criteria and was just a meta-tag rather than a language or ancillary language tag. Also, the 50 tag threshold was IIRC not meant as a hard and fast amount but rather an approximate benchmark. With mod support, I think something that's within 4 questions of the threshold is effectively the same as the threshold. It's a "know it when you see it" kind of judicial sliding scale. — TylerH 1 min ago
10:25 PM
Why not [jestjs] [elasticsearch-jest] so that there will be no confusion whatsoever? — Braiam 20 secs ago
@TylerH - although I understand what you are talking about, I still don't think we should go around preliminary discussion especially when there is mod support. At least providing the information on why all 4 criteria should be necessary when asking to do away with the tag and waiting at least a day for others to provide feedback (not everyone is in the same timezone as the asker) will only be beneficial for the community, it is unilateral decisions that are harmful. Did anyone consider asking feedback from the top answerer in the tag, btw (who actually has at least bronze tags in ML)? — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
@Braiam - you mean making jestjs and [elasticsearch-jest] tags? Yes, I think that is a viable option as well. — Oleg Valter 43 secs ago
Yes, the solution is easy, but the volume makes it hard. Babel is worse than this because there's around 1500 posts which are related to the original Babel, and the remaining which are about BabelJS. Going through that amount of posts is very hard. — Bhargav Rao ♦ 1 min ago
@BhargavRao - maybe it is time to respark the discussion on Babel. I can provide some supplementary data and either add to the initial question or start a new one (whichever is better) - I agree with Braiam here, babel can become python-babel or be postfixed: babel-py (or babel-python) — Oleg Valter 41 secs ago
While I don't really like that direction, @Braiam, I suppose we aren't left with other options. — Bhargav Rao ♦ 32 secs ago
"If he'd accepted the edit, you wouldn't know you did anything wrong." You cannot just claim this. I check the review of every single edit I make. If somebody accepts and edits my edit, I read what changes they made, to understand what I did wrong, or could've done better. This has been very helpful several times. However, when my edits are rejected and edited, it makes me unhappy, and uninterested in making more edits. If these changes made to my suggested edits are small, I just get annoyed. — Andreas 43 secs ago
Btw, this leaves us with 107 only if we exclude those tagged with jest + typescript as well. 103 without ecmascript-6 — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
@BhargavRao - yes, thank you, I only wanted to refine it further, we can also exclude those that are tagged with angularjs, but the query got over the limit, maybe a SEDE will help — Oleg Valter 15 secs ago
The one I shared was just for a start, @OlegValter, feel free to improvise on that. Anything around 100~150 should be easy to handle. — Bhargav Rao ♦ 1 min ago
I will link you how we dealt with a tag that resisted to die in Unix and Linux: Unfortunately, the questions keep coming in. I try to catch them early but some always fall through the cracks. Please blacklist install so that we can clean up the remaining occurrences.. — Braiam 1 min ago
11:19 PM
Can you get atleast 1 other user who's well versed in the tags to comment on this post? If one other person who's an SME in the tag agrees, then I'll approve the synonym. — Bhargav Rao ♦ 1 min ago
11:31 PM
@ggorlen why mention so much intent? I've read the editing rules and only say about "meaning" nothing about "intent" — Braiam 31 secs ago
11:57 PM
Yes, but that again is a design issue isnt it? If i downvote something I am encouraged to edit the answer or comment to explain what is incorrect with it right? — Akshay Sehgal 18 secs ago
@AkshaySehgal Snarky comments explaining why they downvoted are not encouraged. — 10 Rep 33 secs ago
You're certainly not encouraged to edit answers except to correct grammar and that's not really a reason to downvote. You have no obligation to explain what's incorrect with it either. — Robert Longson 44 secs ago
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