12:06 AM
Funny, there's only one Linus Torvalds. As for impersonator, it requires a complete profile, just a picture or name isn't enough; they need to do a complete profile that would realistically lead people to believe that it was the impersonated person: meta.stackexchange.com/a/174589/282094 meta.stackexchange.com/a/279109/282094 meta.stackexchange.com/a/174456/282094 meta.stackexchange.com/a/99918/282094 meta.stackexchange.com/q/74584/282094 — Rob 33 secs ago
I vote for lua-torch (as Ubuntu calls it
lua-torch-torch7
) and pytorch (official, common usage). — Mateen Ulhaq 1 min ago
3 hours later…
3:30 AM
3:56 AM
@NotThatGuy what I read from this answer is that users are forced to use their real name/photo/detail, not even pseudonyms, similar to a discussion on MathOverflow. And real-account verification has been officially declined — Andrew T. 51 secs ago
4:08 AM
It's arbitrary in which one the mod chose, not that they chose (the reasons for which they helpfully linked in the meta discussion) — ijustlovemath 1 min ago
It's also not arbitrary which one the mod choses. They keep the oldest one. In this case the one posted at 21:27 was kept and the one posted 7 minutes later at 21:35 was removed. — Henry Ecker 25 secs ago
You can flag your post as "in need of moderator intervention" and explain what you'd like to happen and why. Mod deletion can only be reversed by another moderator so you'll need their assistance to make the change. — Henry Ecker 31 secs ago
1 hour later…
5:23 AM
6:08 AM
Does this answer your question? Wrong duplicate answer was deleted – can this be reversed? — cigien just now
6:48 AM
@SecurityHound They aren't code-only answers, though. Some of them have quite a lot of non-code text. — PM 2Ring 58 secs ago
2 hours later…
8:31 AM
Yes, it is possible. Just run
delete from posts where id = 51226112
but it requires that you get hired as an SE dev and are granted full privileges to the production db. And if you pull this one off it might be your last action as SE employee ;) — rene 5 secs ago@J.Gwinner Your reputation history would be here. Cases of fraudulent voting are uncommon, but if the votes have disappeared, it may well have been that, so they were reverted. All working as intended! — E_net4 the comment flagger 1 min ago
@Dharman "It didn't contain any original content" - That's not a metric to decide whether a contribution is a link-only answer or not. If you are struggling this much understand what is and isn't a link-only answer, can't you have a fellow moderator clue you in? — IInspectable 12 secs ago
9:10 AM
2 hours later…
11:28 AM
It has one down vote, why are you so concerned about the opinion of one person in a community of millions. Downvotes are criticism they are a rating mechanic, to denote the post isn't useful or isn't helpful, that's all. — Larnu 15 secs ago
11:55 AM
Does this answer your question? Score indicator of "accepted" posts in user profile became black text on green background — VLAZ 24 secs ago
12:15 PM
It seems like they edited the image back into these two answers. I've re-edited them out, but it might be better to just watch the linked posts for a few days. — The Thonnu 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? Was there a UI change that prevents the inbox count from resetting when the mailbox is clicked without selecting a message? — The Thonnu 28 secs ago
12:43 PM
@The Thonnu: Now I know that I can mark all comments as read. But this is not what I want. Comments should be selectively marked as read when I read them. This answer is not there. — Kalle Svensson 6 secs ago
1:41 PM
Best to ignore down-votes and move on. Also, consider being more selective in choosing which questions to answer. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
2:16 PM
Thank you. I swear it didn't work that way when I tried before. I could open and close envelopes, and nothing happened with my inbox; it steadily showed many unread messages. But I also rebooted the PC. — Kalle Svensson 54 secs ago
2:36 PM
2:55 PM
Best to edit your main site question, showing for a fact and in fair detail, that it is not a duplicate, and then pinging the dupe closer, here
@Rabbid76
, notifying them of the edits. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min agoAs an aside, if I were the one reviewing your question, I'd vote to close it for not showing enough debugging details and for being unfocused (more than one question is present). — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
Also, regarding, "...even though it has nothing to do with networking.", is this 100% true? — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
Also please add a minimal reproducible example, I don't think you really need all of your code to demonstrate your problem. — Abdul Aziz Barkat 42 secs ago
This question seems very obviously to be something to do with networking, to the point where I genuinely can't understand what you think "networking" means if you don't think this qualifies. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
@HovercraftFullOfEels Then whats the point in having downvotes? They should also be a signal to the asker/answerer, not only other visitors, that their post isn't useful. When they ignore downvotes they continue creating unhelpful content. — Tom 8 secs ago
@Tom: the specific point about down-votes is a flag to future visitors your view on the utility of the question or answer. And by "ignore" I should have been more specific: best not to post a meta post about a down-vote, especially if it is only 1 or 2 DV's, if only to avoid the Meta Effect. While the meta effect is sometimes in your favor, most often it is not. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
"I noticed that difficult questions often gets closed not because they are unclear or lack details but because the voter finds it difficult to answer that question" -- did one of the close voters tell you straight out that this is why they voted to close your question? If not, how can you assume that this is the reason? — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 47 secs ago
So, "he" did in fact tell you outright that he voted to close your question because it was too difficult? I see no comments in the moved-to-chat from any one of your 3 close voters — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
No but it is obvious and my question was not unclear or lacked details as you can see for yourself and it was not unclear for the member who had provided a correct answer, either.. Also my colleagues experienced the same unjustifiable closings on questions that were just difficult - not unclear. — Pavel Stepanek 54 secs ago
You've edited your question 17 times before it got closed. In the 14th revision you added the part about escaping quotes, this seems to be an indicator that your question at least before the 14th revision wasn't clear enough. We don't have timestamps for the initial close voters (except maybe a moderator would be able to see those) — Abdul Aziz Barkat 51 secs ago
@Abdul: No the part about escaping quotes was there from the beginning it was just in the color diagram. Also, me editing it so many times shows the evolution of the test vectors for corner cases - not uncleariness. I made a good effort to improve this question with all these edits. — Pavel Stepanek 1 min ago
Also note that mods generally don't get involved in normal reopening. Unless there's clear evidence to indicate some type of abuse, flags asking for questions to be reopened generally get declined. Use reopen votes instead — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 47 secs ago
It's certainly a tricky (and annoying) regex task, but I don't think the question is unclear. You've explained it quite well, IMHO. — PM 2Ring 5 secs ago
I wouldn't call communication between two devices through a USB cable "networking". — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
@Pavel You will be able to cast reopen votes on your own questions when you have 250 rep points. See stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/view-close-votes — PM 2Ring 56 secs ago
@Karl Knechtel, Its not networking between two clients of a gaming server though is it? which the moderator referred me too. — Matthew Haywood 1 min ago
@AndrewT. Whether someone uses their real name is completely different from whether someone uses a URL to a website profile that provably uniquely points to a specific individual that isn't them. — NotThatGuy 40 secs ago
@AbdulAzizBarkat, I have included more than necessary because previously people closed questions due to not being enough code. — Matthew Haywood 1 min ago
@PM 2Ring: Exactly, it is a tricky and annoying (to some) question. But annoying is not the same as "unclear". I think there should be requirement to justify an "unclear" claim during close-voting. e.g.: "it is unclear how to treat unbalanced quotes". Finally, note that I am rising this issue despite already having received a correct answer, because I don't want this question AND ANSWER to disappear from Stackoveflow so other people can benefit from it in the future. — Pavel Stepanek 54 secs ago
@KarlKnechtel Maybe this? How can one appeal the decisions of high-reputation users? — Dharman ♦ 58 secs ago
@MatthewHaywood yes, I was particularly stressing on the "minimal" part of "minimal reproducible example" if that wasn't clear. — Abdul Aziz Barkat 33 secs ago
4:08 PM
BTW, it's reasonable to claim that a question was closed unfairly or erroneously. However, it's not a good idea to make accusations about people's motives: that generally is not well-received here on meta. And despite what the close notice says, that doesn't mean that all 3 close voters chose that reason. — PM 2Ring 35 secs ago
Could you please stop doing this unless you can verify whether or not the generated answer is correct? Right now you're just making extra work for others who have to wade through answers which look okay at first glance but are quite often incorrect and sometimes complete nonsense. That's antisocial; you should stop. — jcalz 1 min ago
I noticed this answer/account and came looking to see if this was already addressed on meta. stackoverflow.com/questions/74667553/… — Martin Smith 1 min ago
yeah ChatGPT themselves do state as a limitation "ChatGPT sometimes writes plausible-sounding but incorrect or nonsensical answers" — Martin Smith 28 secs ago
There are many many questions on Stack Overflow about problems with an Arduino connecting to a 'Processing' application (sort of Java) running on a PC (or Mac). — Peter Mortensen 58 secs ago
Posting answers you cannot verify as correct is antisocial and actively harmful, whether they were generated by AI, sent to you by a friend, or scrawled backwards on your bathroom mirror by an unseen presence. If your point is that this is a problem and we should worry about it, doing it yourself is not an acceptable way to make the point. If someone mugged you, you wouldn't thank them for pointing out how easy it is to mug someone, would you? Please stop doing this. Anyone else who is doing this: please stop. — jcalz 1 min ago
While the question isn't a duplicate, the answers here: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/268240/3648282 may assist you. The banner on your closed question is clear about reopening, if it's the reviewers that you want to complain about remember that it takes more than just one to close for that reason. — Rob 27 secs ago
First of all, my initial experiment was to see how easily I can submit an answer and get free reputation points. I was purposefully searching for dumb/simple question that can easily disprove any AI wrongness (which already happened a few times). Proven possible and not always accurate I've lost interest. Now what I do is tell the AI to write an answer based on what I actually intend to say. Secondly, I do check for obvious wrong answers now given by the prompt and I do check if the code works, it's not hard. You think telling me to stop it will stop EVERYONE from doing these silly stuff? — Jefferson 6 secs ago
That's why we have multiple people checking for the answer and downvoting it. Telling me to not or what to do would do absolutely nothing. More AI programs coming, you cannot stop kids from doing exactly what I did can you? The best thing StackOverflow can do is to incorporate their own version so that it gives an AI answer the questions before they are submitted (the person will know that such thing exist and it can lower the number of duplicated/silly questions). — Jefferson 24 secs ago
Related (also serial communication and protocol questions): [Are questions about [at-command]s on-topic on Stack Overflow?(meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/403258/…) — Peter Mortensen 45 secs ago
@jcalz I earned hard my reputation during my college years. My intention is not to ruin this community and face unnecessary ramifications. Just wanted to try this out and was amazed how easy it was to earn 100+ reps without breaking a sweat. — EugenSunic 47 secs ago
Related (serial communication and protocol questions): Are questions about [at-command]s on-topic on Stack Overflow? — Peter Mortensen 31 secs ago
"the evolution of the test vectors for corner cases" That's nearly the definition of "unclear" for a question asking for a regular expression. Writing a regular expression is largely about what the corner cases are and how to handle them. Not having them explicitly defined nearly always makes such questions unclear. — Makyen ♦ 19 secs ago
If you don't want to face "unnecessary ramifications" you could delete any of your answers which you cannot personally verify as being correct, or at least any of the answers with which people have explicitly pointed out problems. — jcalz 53 secs ago
There are many questions on Stack Overflow about problems with an Arduino connecting to a 'Processing' application (sort of Java) running on a PC (or Mac). Sample. It seems to be included in many curricula. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
5:03 PM
A common error for those is that the protocol is line-oriented. The official documentation and code examples for that are very poor and misleading. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
A common error for those is that the protocol (or rather implicitly by the standard function call) is line-oriented. The official Arduino documentation and code examples for that are very poor and misleading. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
It certainly shouldn't have been closed with that question. As far as I can see, 'Twisted' supports different protocols, but all based on TCP (for local LAN/Wi-Fi/Ethernet/Internet, not serial). — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
It certainly shouldn't have been closed with that question. As far as I can see, 'Twisted' supports different protocols, but they are all based on TCP (for local LAN/Wi-Fi/Ethernet/Internet, not serial). — Peter Mortensen just now
@Makyen: Initially there were 10 test vectors and BEFORE the question was closed I added 3 more. — Pavel Stepanek 29 secs ago
@Makyen: Initially there were 10 test vectors and BEFORE the question was closed I added 3 more. Due to the laws of combinatorics, an exhaustive list of all test vectors would be huge - one can only pick and choose the best vectors for brevity. — Pavel Stepanek just now
@Makyen: Initially there were 10 test vectors and BEFORE the question was closed I added 3 more. Due to the laws of combinatorics, an exhaustive list of all test vectors would be huge - one can only pick and choose the best ones for brevity.. All in all, closing and eventually deleting this question only deprives the people in the future from benefiting by the helluva good work that the author of the accepted answer had done. Note, that closing this question has happened AFTER I already had received the correct answer. — Pavel Stepanek 1 min ago
Re "robots to do all the work for us": That was also predicted in the 1980s (the so-called "leisure society"). It didn't happen. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
"It didn't happen". A person been smoking for 20 years, says: "they said ill get cancer, yet I didn't!". Things take time y'know, your answer doesn't make any sense, because a lot of jobs are ALREADY being automated. Automation is a process, not an instant thing that happens on Tuesday morning. — Jefferson 30 secs ago
Re "...last 10 answers": That quickly becomes out of date. Is the youngest one ID 74659745? — Peter Mortensen 24 secs ago
@PeterMortensen I've deleted the downvoted answers. I'm think I'm good now. — EugenSunic 29 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Is it acceptable to post answers generated by an AI, such as GitHub Copilot? — cigien 15 secs ago
Could you clarify why you feel the linked post doesn't answer your question? If I'm understanding your question correctly, you're asking "I'm posting answers using some AI like technology. What are the community's feelings about this?". That's exactly what the suggested duplicate is asking, only for a different (though very related) technology. — cigien 24 secs ago
@cigien you explained it well, "for a different (though very related) technology". I would just like to add that it's a much more different technology. — EugenSunic 1 min ago
No, it's not a much more different technology. It's just the latest version of a technology that seems impressive to us because it's "human-like" (something which we, and I include myself, find very cool). However, the technology will continue to improve and there will be a new tool out in a couple of weeks/months/years that will be even cooler. I don't see that we need a new Meta post about each one because I don't see that community consensus on how to deal with content generated by such tools is going to change each time. — cigien 36 secs ago
6:20 PM
@PeterMortensen considering the mathematis, programming, science you've done in your career you should leave the gates open for AI. Comparing 1980 to 2020+ is something I wouldn't expect from a guy like you. — EugenSunic 26 secs ago
6:38 PM
Regarding "plausible sounding" in this case the answer seems so close - except it seems to have just invented a possible return code of
3
that isn't correct - or would even be relevant stackoverflow.com/a/74668146/73226 — Martin Smith 1 min ago7:11 PM
It is part of Stack Overflow history that Atwood hard deleted the boat programming question ((referenced at 1 h 02 min 43 secs in episode 50 of the Stack Overflow podcast, classic series (2009-04-21))). But it was rescued with a life boat. — Peter Mortensen 25 secs ago
7:25 PM
@cigien - I can totally see community consensus changing as the tech evolves. Likely any problems caused by this tech will also change. For example as the tech becomes more viable for more questions I can imagine a greater proportion of FGITW answers that are not just "code only" and that are at least superficially plausible and that the humans on the site will need to spend longer evaluating and moderating these. — Martin Smith 1 min ago
A guess is that the downvote is a signal that you shouldn't answer homework dumps (which are also likely to be duplicates). — Peter Mortensen 52 secs ago
A guess is that the downvote is a signal that you shouldn't answer homework dumps AKA work orders (which are also likely to be duplicates). They also delete the question as soon as they can or are allowed, removing the value (if any) from (most) everybody else, paid homework or not. — Peter Mortensen 48 secs ago
8:11 PM
We can't allow a moderator to close a question so easily
it wasn't a moderator is was a gold badge holder — user438383 1 min ago
2 hours later…
10:41 PM
On Stack Exchange, there seems to be a new trend of misspellings by adding the letter "e" (or doubling it) to words (not only on Stack Overflow). Registered very recently: "mostely", "unite", "greately", "moree", "refreesh", — Peter Mortensen 36 secs ago
cont' - "aree", and "secrete". It can't all be attributed to broken keyboards (e.g., the three double 'e's) or typos. E.g., was there some kind of operating system or web browser update that could explain this, e.g. in Android? And/or introduction of some AI thing with unspecified IQ? — Peter Mortensen 6 secs ago
cont' - "aree", and "secrete". It can't all be attributed to broken keyboards (e.g., the three double 'e's) or typos ('e' and 't' are separated by one key ('r')). And most likely not by chance (there are too many of them). E.g., was there some kind of operating system or web browser update that could explain this, e.g. in Android? And/or introduction of some AI thing with unspecified IQ? E.g., a new kind of autocorrect (that doesn't use an actual dictionary)? — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
11:35 PM
"it is extremely important to be able to publish the complete CSV." -- (x) doubt. There's almost never a valid reason to post a complete data file — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 5 secs ago
I understand @ZoestandswithUkraine , but when it is necessary, how should I proceed? What is the correct method? — Digital Farmer 56 secs ago
« first day (1220 days earlier) ← previous day next day → last day (503 days later) »