12:12 AM
In the past day or so I just saw about 2 dozen maui/.net maui questions show up. Do we have a consensus for which to use? There were 9 new .net-maui, and 13 maui tagged questions in the last 24-48 hours. — Roddy of the Frozen Peas 43 secs ago
12:57 AM
@Kos that's only true until it's been closed as a typo or duplicate. No answers are accepted after that. — Mark Ransom 37 secs ago
1:29 AM
"maui" is still the dominant one overall, by far. However, IMHO, It would be best to force "tag-disambiguation" when someone types that, and force it to be ".net-maui", which is the precise name of the technology. — ToolmakerSteve 18 secs ago
2:00 AM
There's another category where the premise of the question is faulty. The OP has fundamental misunderstanding of large swathes of the domain and the resulting question makes zero sense when taken at face value. In this case, the only way to help the OP is to point to some textbook. — Passer By 9 secs ago
2:40 AM
3:00 AM
Does this answer your question? What is the right way to handle link-only answers that refer to another StackOverflow question/answer? — cigien 54 secs ago
3:32 AM
That's definitely a link-only answer. The non-link part is describing what's in the link. Might be worth looking at the original MSE guidance — Machavity ♦ 47 secs ago
3:50 AM
When you read the guidance at the help center, what do you think could apply? Please don't expect us to critique when you haven't. — philipxy 1 min ago
4:42 AM
Welcome to meta, the place to discuss the policy of this site. We don't know how or why you posted this question here, but unfortunately, your question is off-topic here. Consider reviewing this question again and see what you can improve before reposting this on the main site. Otherwise, if you can't post on there, please read What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”?. — Andrew T. 1 min ago
2 hours later…
6:44 AM
Years and years ago now, Head Office sent teams to investigate the downloading of gigabytes of porn. Turned out a new version of Eclipse had just come out that had support for some then-new features of Java 5. Those folks at Playboy did a lot of web development and hosted an Eclipse mirror. They also had really, really fast pipes, so most of our Java devs were directed to Playboy when they updated. — user4581301 just now
When an answer is nothing but a link to another answer, the other answer should probably be proposed as a duplicate. That or the answer is wrong. — user4581301 20 secs ago
2 hours later…
8:24 AM
1 hour later…
9:30 AM
"But this was flagged and deleted and later used as an audit which I failed because it is wrong." - There is nothing "ok" about the answer in that audit. Compare that answer to the accepted upvoted answer, and notice the quality difference. You failed a legitimate audit because the incorrect choice was selected. The answer was also likely already deleted when you reviewed it. So you also indicated that, an answer that had already been deleted, was "ok" which is obviously NOT the correct choice. — Security Hound 1 min ago
9:55 AM
1 hour later…
10:59 AM
"But this answer linked to another location inside the site not to an external source." it's still link-only answer. All it says is that the real answer is in another castle. Removing it is quite appropriate. At most, it should have been a proposed duplicate. Or maybe just a comment. But not an answer. — VLAZ 11 secs ago
11:14 AM
11:39 AM
As a better work-around, you can just leave the collective. It’s not like you get any benefits from being there. — user3840170 51 secs ago
11:54 AM
Further boat programming reference: at 1 h 02 min 43 secs in episode 50 of the Stack Overflow podcast, classic series (2009-04-21) — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
12:07 PM
@user876sd87g6sd8fag7 'hat sounds extremely hostile to me. Anonymous down-voting without explanation almost always is' , if you want to see real hostility, you should imagine the results from honest explanations, eg 'you could not be bothered to read tbe FAQ or do even minimal dupe-checks, preferring instead to try and offload that diligence onto other users'. SO would regard such a comment as rude and abusive, even if correct, so commenters have to lie or get banned. Neither SO or new accounts really want explanatory comments. — Martin James 50 secs ago
I mean - if users want to lash out about, (claims of, with no evidence), 'trolling and hostility', why should I give them a sword so they can stab me on meta/Totter/Facepalm? — Martin James 1 min ago
1 hour later…
1:19 PM
@ChristophRackwitz, I'd rather let the CMs do it. Worst case, you can post another meta question asking why there has been no action yet. — Bhargav Rao 1 min ago
2:02 PM
"How could this user' security loophole be mitigated?" - stop clicking links without taking measures to protect yourself — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 24 secs ago
The question, for 10k users: stackoverflow.com/q/73260127/6296561 — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 46 secs ago
Also, the page isn't blank. It does load some type of page that looks a suspicious lot like a blog, at least when the traffic is routed via the UK. Doesn't appear to be malicious. The frontpage (read: no subdomains) does fail to load, but that appears to be a missing DNS entry or dead server. My browser errors out rather than showing a blank page anyway — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 15 secs ago
I'm not invested enough in this forum to care, but maybe - just maybe - you should have paid more attention to my question and its implications, before down voting. It's about a user who wants to answer a question to gain more reputation, and - as humans have only a single language processor - he won't have anything else in mind apart from the technical aspects of the question, and his reputation points. So the risks are more acute than, say, other parts of the internet. The page in question won't load until you add
www
, and accept the certificate error. It will load a standard Plesk serv. — platipus_on_fire 1 min agoAnyway, related feature request: Should there be a warning before users leave a Stack Exchange site? — Andrew T. 8 secs ago
"It's about a user who wants to answer a question to gain more reputation, and - as humans have only a single language processor - he won't have anything else in mind apart from the technical aspects of the question, and his reputation points" honestly, that's their own problem if they only care about reputation and ignoring the rest, even their own security/privacy. — Andrew T. 12 secs ago
This has been a problem since day 1. Isn't there some canonical meta post? Related: What happens to a user when he/she adds a malicious link into posts?, Should this answer be deleted due to linking to (potentially) malicious content — Peter Mortensen 56 secs ago
None of you, esteemed people with 20k+ reputation I will deffo not strive to reach after this interaction, have stopped to consider the frame of mind of the answerer. It's not the same as visiting a random website, where you might have security in mind as well, but it's a special (marketing trap?) situation: there are points to be made, there is a technical situation to be solved, and already your attention span is overloaded. — platipus_on_fire 1 min ago
2:54 PM
I'm failing to see the problem still. Perhaps you should better explain the issue rather than rambling in the comments. — Nick stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
Well @NickstandswithUkraine, all the other commentators from above managed to see it, even the ones with immensely obnoxious replies, quickly followed by elitist replies. It's explained in plain English, I'm not sure how else I could explain it better. Maybe by joining the many, many Youtube videos about what SE has become these years, and debating this question? — platipus_on_fire 45 secs ago
@platipus_on_fire No, I understand what you're asking, I fail to understand why it's a problem. You're on the Internet, take your security as seriously as you would anywhere on the Internet, why should SO do anything special? — Nick stands with Ukraine 1 min ago
Because of it's very nature of Q&A, encouraged by a points-accruing system and a well crafted (marketing wise) badge accruing system: it encourages you to interact with the question, including any urls posted in that question. Therefore it should assume responsibility and try to mitigate eventual security risks. — platipus_on_fire 8 secs ago
So? A search engine exists purely to link to stuff, and encourages you to click stuff. In fact, search engines go the extra mile; you go there with the intent of clicking stuff. Yet, scam ads and fraudulent results show up constantly, and are handled after the fact. That's what we do as well. Mass-educating people about the problem is something SO cannot be expected to do, because it's a wide-spread problem that should reach out to every user on the internet. Until then, we fight it after being posted, and thanks to Charcoal and other organized moderation efforts, and spam flags in general, — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 53 secs ago
A search engine will not award you points and badges for interacting with its search results. The comparison is moot. — platipus_on_fire 1 min ago
You go there to click links. By your own claims, "It's about a user who wants to answer a question to gain more reputation, and - as humans have only a single language processor - he won't have anything else in mind apart from the technical aspects of the question". Here, that transforms to "It's about a user who wants to click a link to solve a problem/find an answer/do something else, and - as humans [...] - they won't have anything else in mind but clicking". — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
If search engines are a different problem, then your arguments about why it's a problem on SO don't hold water. You can't have it both ways — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 26 secs ago
Again: a search engine will not award you for clicking any links. That's why the comparison with them is moot, and because SO does award you points and badges for a content-creating activity which for SO means revenue, this particular problem is holding water. — platipus_on_fire 22 secs ago
While (most) search engines may not reward you with points or something else, rep on SO acts as a motivator. Most people go to search engines because they already have a motivation for finding something, and the effect of finding the right thing has roughly the exact same neurochemical response as gaining rewards in most cases. The comparison holds, your arguments do not — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
Also, in a lot of cases, the reward may not be from the search engine itself. You may already be attempting to solve another problem, or settle a debate, or doing something else ending in an neurochemical and/or real-life/digital reward — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦ 1 min ago
If what you write would be true, then marketing departments and their high paid jobs (paid to create the exact dopamine-release scaffolds like SO's points & badges system) would be replaced by search engines. The discussion is not about search engines, so let's not hijack it in that direction. — platipus_on_fire 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? What should a 'minimal, reproducible example' include for problems with automating web browsers using Selenium? — Nimantha 17 secs ago
4:22 PM
I suspect the OP is focusing on the word "external" which is taken by the OP to mean a site not in the stackexchange network. — President James K. Polk 2 mins ago
4:42 PM
Yes, I think to most people, so I think that wording is incorrect. — President James K. Polk 54 secs ago
5:19 PM
You should probably add what programming task you're performing that requires yolov4 to run. A sentence or two is enough. It can still be that it is a general setup issue of tooling and those might be off-topic, even after your explanation. — rene 53 secs ago
5:37 PM
All questions (and answers) on Stack Overflow/Stack Exchange are required to be self-contained. If you feel that a question isn't fully understandable without clicking a link to another page, then you should vote or flag for that question to be closed. There should never be a need for you to go to another site in order to fully understand the question or to get a complete answer. Question, and answer, authors can include links to other sites for more context, but SE/SO makes no representations as to how safe it will be to follow such links. — Makyen ♦ just now
What you appear to be asking for here is for SO to present a popup that's basically an "Internet 101" tutorial any time someone tries to click an off-site link, which doesn't seem reasonable. While I certainly have concern for people following external links, I don't see how it's possible/reasonable for us to teach basic responsible internet usage to everyone. I'm sure that any attempt to do so will frustrate/piss-off a substantial quantity of people, particularly those who already know how to responsibly use the internet. — Makyen ♦ 1 min ago
as one of the close voters, to me this looked more like a question for AU.SE because they cover issues people have with CUDA on WSL — gnat 1 min ago
This question is mainly related to calling the DNN module of OpenCV to run the yolov4 so I believe it should be the problem of compiling the OpenCV with Cuda on WSL2. Is it on-topic or not? — kusocodeing 32 secs ago
6:07 PM
You starting point is irrelevant: with less effort, your response falls under the very same sanctions (re-read it). This isn't about my non-sheltering comment to the user, but about a general problem of the site. Your response then continues to be plain wrong with 'You or any one else is not required, ever, to visit any link..'. Yes, you do need to follow most, if not all, to be able to respond properly. The end is a logical fallacy, intentionally ignoring the fact SO is making money from users' activity and generated content, encouraged by a marketing system. — platipus_on_fire 1 min ago
@Mayken, things are a bit more complex than what you appear to understand from them. As long as one uses marketing to actively encourage a dopamine-inducing activity, one should also feel responsible by the (lack of) security possible to arise from such activity. I cannot help feeling a sense of blindness, of mindlessness in the comments I receive. — platipus_on_fire 10 secs ago
6:59 PM
@kusocodeing - if you're trying trying to create and build an OpenCV app that sounds on topic. Maybe you could edit your question to make it more clearly a programming question by including a mcve? Your initial sentence I am trying to run the yolov4 on opencv 4.6 python with cuda on WSL2 with ubuntu 20.04. sounds like you are just running an app not creating one. — dbc 53 secs ago
7:22 PM
@platipus_on_fire I fail to see how the fact that an for-profit organization is running a website all of a sudden have to offer features to keep their users safe beyond what is reasonable. What is next? They have to send all of us a wire-less mouse because otherwise we might trip over its cord? — rene just now
You also fail to see beyond your mistyped sarcasm, otherwise you would have acknowledged your passive-aggressiveness towards a new user, as well as the intellectual dishonesty of your post. It's all good: this is living proof of the toxicity of this site, so maybe someone will take steps towards improving it. — platipus_on_fire 49 secs ago
@rene perhaps the whole companies to exclude section needs to be removed. — Cave Johnson 14 secs ago
Yeah. It is probably hard to remove all features at once when you no longer offer the functionality the feature was meant for. — rene 51 secs ago
7:59 PM
It can be hard, but you have to accept that people can still be intelligent and just disagree with you. These comments about blindness, mindlessness, telling people it can't be that hard to comprehend, suggest you're not able/willing to do that at the moment, and it doesn't make for productive discourse — Clive 1 min ago
@Clive: Disagreement is one thing, groupthink and the over-decent dose of passive aggressiveness is another, coupled with intellectual dishonesty. The reaction of mods group was exactly as described in countless posts on Quora, Reddit, YT vids and other forums. It's like my question is blasphemic towards some sort of shrine, and no amount of logical reasons to even consider the fragility of human mind at the point of answering a question would suffice. — platipus_on_fire 44 secs ago
8:22 PM
Thanks for quoting my ridiculous oversimplification and pointing out the ridiculousness thereof. I'm not saying easy questions have no place on SO, and I'm not saying that this question is trivial, let alone that its answers would be; sorry if it seemed to be. All I was trying to explain, is how close-voters would react in a kneejerk way to seemingly trivial questions, and that they're wrong. I find your answer amazingly to the point, and @Cody's comment proof of the complexity of the subject. The question simply shows no research, hence the downvotes. — CodeCaster 1 min ago
My problem with the site at large and meta in particular is that there is a group of users who close about everything they don't like, because they know the answer, or they don't want to answer, or they don't know how to answer, or they don't like the subject of. They're abusing their close vote powers, and they've got moderators in their ranks. And they're very vocal, and they use their voting powers to the same tune on meta. They stop me from participating, and not only me. — CodeCaster 1 min ago
8:57 PM
@gnat I do agree that it is not a coding problem as it works on a physical Linux machine, but it is related to OpenCV app development so is it on-topic? BTW I have uploaded some of the python code to fulfill make it more likely on-topic. — kusocodeing 27 secs ago
@dbc I am not sure your standard between python code and python app? As python is an interpreted language I can execute the code directly by Python without compiling, python code and python apps seem the same to me. — kusocodeing 1 min ago
9:19 PM
This is an excellent question and you explained the scenario very well. I've been in this situation and it's incredibly frustrating to be stuck and not know even know what question to ask because I lack domain knowledge and vocabulary. You're spot on that empathy is useful when answering some questions. — Paul 37 secs ago
9:40 PM
@dbc By the way, I am trying to build the OpenCV with Cuda library for development, is it on or off-topic? — kusocodeing 11 secs ago
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