12:12 AM
Although in theory, retro-computing will consider questions on PC software perhaps only 20 years old, in practice, that's not their area of interest and competence, and you can expect the question to be closed after a couple of days without answer. — david 16 secs ago
12:33 AM
Re "more than 50% of the answers generated in GitHub are done by artificial intelligence.": Do you mean (misuse) of GitHub Issues for support? Do you have some examples? I haven't seen such examples of blatant use of ChatGPT (or similar) yet, though some fell into the "maybe, but not sufficient evidence" bucket. — Peter Mortensen 43 secs ago
12:55 AM
I'm pretty sure that's a no, unless you use it to log into an authentication provider like Google. — Cerbrus 16 secs ago
1:43 AM
Ah, the good old "you don't do things the way I like, hence you're TOXIC". Wondered when that would come up, you didn't fail me :) — Dan Mašek 55 secs ago
2:24 AM
is ther e not a generator out there that does this for us? this seems painful — mike01010 23 secs ago
3:11 AM
I mean, as I said in the early days both SOfT and elsewhere, why do we even need that leaderboard? I am tired of racing everyone to close dupes and bad question only to find an incomplete answer posted seconds before closing which later gets edited (mostly during grace period) into yet another borde line duplicate answer. And I have no hard proof, but I am seeing some voting irregularities as well. I know for many reasons this rant of mine won't change anything, but I needed to vent off. Cheers. — M-- 33 secs ago
@gparyani I wonder, though, why these re-registered accounts would warrant a new accountId on a live production server? It introduces a heavy skew in the distribution of ids. — Dennis Leeftink 57 secs ago
3:25 AM
@pipe I think the renaming had more to do with how incredibly long it took to develop. — Karl Knechtel 53 secs ago
@JohnMontgomery As duplicates go, it's a very good one IMO - especially after the edits. (Of course I have a conflict of interest there ;) ) Asking duplicate questions isn't inherently bad; it can help people later to a) find the canonical and b) recognize that they do in fact have the same problem. — Karl Knechtel 55 secs ago
@AzorAhai-him- I didn't say I believe it. Did I? I'm inside Meta. That quote was "Outside Meta, no one believes just voting without commenting is rational,". I know how users interact outside Meta. And that's not a incorrect belief in and of itself. If you were never exposed to Meta's beliefs and opinions, it wasn't a irrational thought process. Even in meta, users still argue for commenting, when downvoting. I've been outside meta, inside meta and for meta and against meta.. — TheMaster just now
@E_net4 If you truly believed it was abusive, why didn't you use the "abuse" flag, but rather chose the "unfriendly" flag? — TheMaster 50 secs ago
1 hour later…
5:00 AM
In addition, walrus notation is available in everything after 3.8, so the same question could exist with the
python-3.8
tag and the python-3.9
tag — Mars 56 secs ago5:21 AM
2 hours later…
6:52 AM
@mark for the record, I flagged that 15 vote comment and it has just been declined. — Salman A 32 secs ago
There is an uptick in asking for the last 2-3 data points (although that can also be the really bad questions that get removed later on). — NoDataDumpNoContribution 39 secs ago
@TheMaster "abuse" has different meanings in different contexts, in the context of comment flags it means a comment that uses abusive language targeting a person or a group, etc. in the context that E_net4 is speaking about abuse means abuse of the platform (i.e. using the platform / site in a way considered bad) which is described further in the abusive behavior policy. — Abdul Aziz Barkat 21 secs ago
7:19 AM
@Laf Thank you. I have very good role models in former and current moderators. Moderation needs to be transparent and mistakes regardless of how they are made (intentional but wrong action, or accidentally wrong) are always possible. — Dalija Prasnikar ♦ 22 secs ago
8:01 AM
@MarkAmery
everyone reading my comment felt the exasperation was warranted
it's an example why we never able to escape "opinion-based". Everything we do is technically opinion-based... — Swift - Friday Pie 9 secs ago8:21 AM
8:32 AM
"but this makes the normal Login button unresponsive" - you probably blocked the wrong element, and left an invisible container — Zoe is on strike ♦ 11 secs ago
@MarkAmery I personally don't think it's a good idea to justify a possibly inflammatory comment on the basis that "that person deserved it". There's no way to draw a clear line on when it is acceptable™ and such action is more likely to trigger the person than actually having a calming effect. And if we were on Interpersonal Stack Exchange, I would go as far as saying it could have unintended consequences — Clockwork 15 secs ago
@gparyani Phillipe just posted an update on the Stack Exchange meta regarding the site-wide update. As a newly minted user, just wondering why this was moved and also, why reputation from the migrated post isn't transferred to the current account? — Dennis Leeftink 17 secs ago
@Technophile Even the second sentence was removable material, and a comment containing it in isolation should be flagged as no longer needed, as explained here. — E_net4 46 secs ago
When I add
stackoverflow.com###credential_picker_container
to my uBlock rules I don't get the Google one-tap pop-up. — rene 54 secs ago@DanMašek The toxic card has been played so often now that we can make a movie about it. the Toxic Avenger 5: Sludge Overflow. — Gimby 51 secs ago
Well I would argue that it is actually a "yes", because Stack Overflow supports logging in through federated means which will support passkeys. — Gimby 21 secs ago
@DennisLeeftink votes on Meta Stack Exchange affect reputation, votes on other Meta sites like Meta Stack Overflow do not and the reputation shown is the reputation you have on the main site (with some caching involved so there would be some delay in syncing). This was probably moved here because it was specifically about Stack Overflow. — Abdul Aziz Barkat 7 secs ago
@gparyani Phillippe just posted an update on the Stack Exchange meta regarding the site-wide update. As a newly minted user, just wondering why this was moved and also, why reputation from the migrated post isn't transferred to the current account? — Dennis Leeftink 13 secs ago
@AbdulAzizBarkat I understand. We have since come to know that it is a site wide update that is likely causing a spike, not only on Stack Overflow. Should this be migrated once more? The plots can be easily adjusted to account for all networks. — Dennis Leeftink 35 secs ago
I assumed the new signin thing affected all SE sites... did I assume wrong? @gparyani — user 9 secs ago
If that's so, then I'd edit this to feature charts from across the network (examples from different sites) as well as change the title to no longer specifically reference Stack Overflow, then flag for a moderator here to close this question, which will return it back to Meta Stack Exchange. — gparyani 19 secs ago
@DennisLeeftink Hmm, technically it is possible to reject the migration here (either by closing this post or maybe a moderator would be able to reject directly) which would cause it to go back. I don't know whether the back and forth would be worth it though. If you feel that this should be on MSE feel free to flag for a moderator. — Abdul Aziz Barkat 57 secs ago
9:25 AM
@rene Thanks, this is the answer. I was to timid to try the "cosmetic filters" section in uBo's element block picker. — Harald 53 secs ago
9:47 AM
@gparyani No spikyness detected on some of the larger Exchanges, so it currently seems localised to SO. I do think it warrants some 'site-wide' reflection in some form, as the uptick in accountIds will affect current and future SEDE queries. Are existing users assigned a new id when re-registering for one-tap sign-on? Can these ids be linked back to previous post histories? If we are dealing with a superset of existing ids mixed in with new ones, site wide statistics can be heavily impacted if not properly filtered. — Dennis Leeftink 53 secs ago
10:18 AM
It's even weirder that it's not a problem on any of the other domains in the company, like Stack Exchange, which is why I classed this as a bug on the question I posted. My question was marked as a duplicate. However, even though @sam-thomas, your answer 'answers' the question, and finds a user-land solution, it does not highlight this unexpected behaviour to the SO devs, and so the 'bug' is unresolved and will continue to trip future users up. — orionrush 31 secs ago
10:36 AM
The post that I wanted to read was broken because I could not see the blocked images — FreelanceConsultant 7 secs ago
1 hour later…
11:40 AM
The comments would seem to suggest that you need to fix the remote end. Is there something troubling you about that information other than your realisation that what you want to do may not be possible? — Robert Longson 10 secs ago
That would be an answer, then. But downvoting and closing the question asking for "desired behavior, a specific problem or error, and the shortest code necessary to reproduce the problem" when they are already present it seems not fair to me. — Mark 45 secs ago
These comments were not there when the question was closed @RobertLongson, I agree with the OP that the question seems clear. There were other comments though that are now deleted, maybe that would change the situation (but probably not). — Marijn 21 secs ago
Seems like one of the close-voters asked if the file was empty, voted to close and then deleted his comment once the OP refuted that claim... — Cuzy 6 secs ago
12:09 PM
"reply to this comment and point out his misbehaviour" We don't really want to start arguments in the comments. Flagging a comment is not "snitching" its just marking a comment that needs deletion. Deleting the comment is the simplest way to stop any potential arguments, etc. — Abdul Aziz Barkat 11 secs ago
I guess we're missing the HTTP response. What http code is returned for instance? — Robert Longson 1 min ago
If I were to nitpick and guess it might be because it starts out with a common pattern often seen where people say there is an error without accompanying details. - "I'm facing troubles...", you do mention that later on but would have made more sense to be a part of the same sentence (Users may have stopped reading post by this point) — Sayse 49 secs ago
@Sayse I removed the first part of the sentence, thanks for the hint. Anyway, it's hard to believe that all the users that downvoted and closed the question did not read it all — Mark 31 secs ago
12:41 PM
@E_net4 Admission has already been made that the question wasn’t properly handled in time. However, the OP not bowing with reverence is preventing the moderation from acting appropriately. Resume normal operation. — Ache 13 secs ago
1:06 PM
I need details why do you use
mode: 'no-cors'
and what is unclear about the fact that you can't access the response body with mode: 'no-cors'
. — jabaa 27 secs agoThere's nothing related to bowing with reverence etc. The reason posting this Meta question isn't causing an instant undeletion of your question is because: 1. You're not making a case for undeletion and are just asking whether something was fair. 2. This Meta post is not attracting attention from the relevant subject matter experts (SMEs) due to point 1, most people won't cast undelete + reopen votes on question unless they are sure whether the question is properly reproducible, etc. (This needs an SME). — Abdul Aziz Barkat 8 secs ago
The question is unclear. What does "What am I missing" mean? Are you asking why you get this behavior or how to enable and configure CORS? That's two different questions. — jabaa 24 secs ago
1:42 PM
I've done my fair share of warning such users about the inappropriateness of certain actions on SO. The effects may vary, but are usually unproductive. Having received an e-mail accusing me of bashing new users for pointing out the lack of a minimal reproducible example, and one time also seeing a long defaming text file publicly on pastebin about me after warning someone of their misbehavior, it really makes me wonder whether my time is better spent doing things other than replying to unreasonable folks. The answer is yes, it is. — E_net4 43 secs ago
"Some of these read more like comments than actual answers" Probably because they should be as they're asking for clarification. It's just that users below 50(?) rep cannot leave comments, only leaving them with the option to post an answer (or not help the person asking the question at all). — Cuzy 50 secs ago
It's impossible to give a hard "yes" or "no" answer to this. This completely depends on the situation. Sometimes, a guess is as good as you're gonna get. — Cerbrus 26 secs ago
2:09 PM
I find the "Have you tried ..." actually much better as an answer than the "Does the production data ...". The former could actually solve the problem. The latter is just a clarification of the problem. — MisterMiyagi 58 secs ago
@jabaa it was just a way to ask: "why the HTTP GET response is empty while my browser shows its content?". About
no-cors
: I read other similar questions, but I really didn't understand how CORS work — Mark 31 secs agoBut even if it is a dup, or I didn't understand something (like anyone asks something here) why do I deserve SIX downvotes? I don't get the point to punish me in such a way. I tried to make my best to write a question according to SO rules. — Mark 49 secs ago
2:52 PM
I have asked the CM team to look into this. This tag has been problematic for the reasons you've noted. — Machavity ♦ 18 secs ago
@orionrush I'd guess it's because only Stack Overflow, its localized sites (Stack Overflow em Português, Stack Overflow en español, スタック・オーバーフロー), and Sound Design have a native dark theme. — Andrew T. 13 secs ago
@Deborah Meta-commentary does not belong on the main site in the first place. No one is stopping you from discussing about it constructively in an organized fashion, as what happens here on Meta, but the platform is not required to host those takes, much less in places where it does not belong. — E_net4 28 secs ago
@Deborah As to what the "solution" and/or "problem" really are, remember that there are always at least two sides of the story: a user who vented over a single downvote, and a volunteer who voted on a question and moved along without commenting. So we seemingly have 2 problems: that users do not always receive feedback when they were looking for it; and that users trying to help might waste their time or just be attacked. In the former, feedback really isn't guaranteed under the policies established. Whereas in the latter, these cases are CoC violations. — E_net4 just now
@Deborah As to what the "solution" and/or "problem" really are, remember that there are always at least two sides of the story: a user who vented over a single downvote, and a volunteer who voted on a question and moved along without commenting. So we seemingly have 2 problems: that users do not always receive feedback when they were looking for it; and that users trying to help might waste their time or just be attacked in the process. In the former, feedback really isn't guaranteed under the policies established. Whereas in the latter, these cases are CoC violations. — E_net4 1 min ago
3:28 PM
The downvotes are for the missing research effort. You added
mode: 'no-cors'
to your code without reading the docs or searching for it on Stack Overflow. Missing research effort is a downvote reason. It's not a punishment. It's a bad question. — jabaa 35 secs ago3:40 PM
"Does an 'answer' ask whether they checked a specific problem?" — I don't think I understand what you mean by "checking a specific problem". — M. Justin 5 secs ago
If the questions retagging could be done without tons of manual work (I am not familiar with the tooling), then I think it's worth it and should be done to allow the merging process to be honest. — Islam Hassan 5 secs ago
Do the stats also count disabled accounts? Because you seem to plot the age of (active) accounts, and it is not that strange, that people that are new, also get rid of the account quite soon. — willeM_ Van Onsem 27 secs ago
"Problems go into the question box. Solutions go into the answer box." - that's probably typically true, but I don't see why it is necessarily the case. A question truly might just be asking what causes an error to happen and not seeking any advice on how to solve the error whatsoever. — Mark Amery 51 secs ago
@M.Justin Consider the example from the question: "Does the production data for X or y have the same distribution as your test data ?" This is a problem that someone can check by plotting and comparing the two data sets, without actually solving anything. — MisterMiyagi 20 secs ago
IMO the suggestion of editing an answer like "Have you tried Python 3.7.1?" to "Python 3.7.1 will solve this issue." here needs heavy caveating. You should only make an edit like that if you're confident that it's true (or, I suppose, if the answerer has somehow indicated - e.g. in a comment - that they are confident it's true and intended to express that). Otherwise you're replacing an answer that comes across (probably by intent) as speculative and uncertain with one that authoritatively makes definitive claims the original author probably isn't sure are true. — Mark Amery 19 secs ago
I disagree. Speculation and uncertainty don't belong in the answer box. Comments and votes can be used to confirm or dispute whether the answers are correct. Couching language in the answer isn't helpful. — Stephen Ostermiller ♦ just now
"Speculation and uncertainty don't belong in the answer box" - well then I'd say that "Have you tried Python 3.7.1?" is not an answer and should be deleted as NAA, contrary to what you say here; I don't see how you can have it both ways. If an author frames their answer as a speculative and uncertain suggestion, and you as a reader/editor are also not sure that it will work, then I don't see how turning their answer into a definitive (and quite possibly entirely false) statement that the solution will work can possibly be the right thing to do. — Mark Amery 56 secs ago
Changing "Have you tried Python 3.7.1?" to "Using Python 3.7.1 can solve the problem in certain circumstances" would be one way to state it with less confidence compared to "Python 3.7.1 will solve this issue." — Abdul Aziz Barkat 10 secs ago
You're correct that I was too quick to close this as a duplicate when it is a bug, rather than a support question, so I've reopened it. — Makyen ♦ 38 secs ago
If I were the Dev team I'd be tempted to call this a bug in Edge rather than a bug in SO's dark mode implementation. Can you explain why you think otherwise? — President James K. Polk 56 secs ago
However, it's not clear to me, at this time, that this is a bug which is the responsibility of SE. It seems more that it's a bug in Edge and/or that it should be a feature request for Edge to be able to have an exclude list for their implementation of dark mode. Basically, it's the browser that's doing this as a specific and explicit change to the site. It's really incumbent upon the browser to make sure that it works properly, or to at least provide the user with the ability to turn it off on a per-site basis. — Makyen ♦ 55 secs ago
Based on you not providing it as an optional workaround, I assume that this happens on SO in all three settings of your SO Theme setting of "Dark", "System setting", and "Light". Is that correct? — Makyen ♦ 48 secs ago
You don't deserve six downvotes, but some of that could be the meta effect. You also should not delete your question, even if it's a dup. A different observable effect of the same problem can be valuable in helping future developers who experience the same observation to find the dup and thus a solution. — President James K. Polk 45 secs ago
4:46 PM
And where's the link to my profile? I would expect there to be an obvious icon link in the header but can't see it. — Nick W 51 secs ago
It's possibly worth noting that there are still some 2.x implementations out there - Jython (and RPython?) spring to mind. — snakecharmerb 47 secs ago
5:00 PM
Jython is pretty much dead. RPython is not an implementation, it's a restricted subset used by PyPy, and PyPy supports 3.x for some time now. — wim 51 secs ago
It isn't just fast answers that are phrased like this. I commonly see late answers like "I had this problem too and I did X. Maybe that will solve your problem too?" Phrasing it as a question indicates that they aren't sure that it solves the problem in all cases, but it isn't in any way asking for clarification. — Stephen Ostermiller ♦ 38 secs ago
@easleyfixed None of the images are hosted off-site. i.stack.imgur (from the screenshot) was Stack's old image host.
i.sstatic.net
, which the image here on meta is uploaded to, is Stack's new self-hosted image system. They're in the middle of migrating, and new uploads (at least on meta) seem to be going to it instead. — Zoe is on strike ♦ 18 secs agoInteresting, because before it was transfered from Stackoverflow to Meta it had that link, so somehow it knew it was going to be moved before it was moved? — easleyfixed 19 secs ago
5:24 PM
Given that I don't see anyone saying this happens when SO is manually set to the "Light" theme, I'm now assuming that this not happening when SO's theme is manually set to "Light" (which seems to be a reasonable and valid user-level workaround with no impact on the user's system or other sites). — Makyen ♦ 23 secs ago
I closed this because you deleted your original question. This question on meta is impossible to answer without seeing your original question on Stack Overflow. — Stephen Ostermiller ♦ 16 secs ago
@easleyfixed I also said they're in the middle of migrating. Apparently, as of 25 minutes ago, it seems the sstatic image host is used everywhere for new uploads on SO main and meta. Yes, it is the new system, but it isn't fully used for everything yet. There's a full migration of all images previously uploaded to i.stack.imgur coming at some point too. — Zoe is on strike ♦ 30 secs ago
Usage notes: use images sparingly. Pretty much the only times you want to use an image is when the question is about the image, you have a rendering problem, or when you have to show a GUI dialog to show how you've configured the system. If the image isn't worth a thousand words, be cautious. Never show images of code, diagnostic messages, etc... Also try to provide runnable example code, the smallest possible complete program that demonstrates the behaviour you want to fix. Use this for inspiration. — user4581301 48 secs ago
Side note, on your title, don't put tags like that in it. The tags are for the tags. How to Ask explains more on this subject. — Thom A 1 min ago
5:36 PM
6:19 PM
Unfortunately people do vote because of missing shown research effort. Which is just plain wrong and grossly misunderstanding / selectively reading the description of the downvote button, but at this point if you try to convince anyone that likes to think like that they'll just look the other way and go la-la-la-la-la until you're gone. — Gimby 8 secs ago
6:33 PM
-6 does seem a bit excessive, but, also, if 6 people found your question and were annoyed that it was lacking response headers and no error text to indicate what the "NetworkError" is and their all people who are more than willing to vote on posts that deserve votes, then -6 is what you'll get. — Kevin B 16 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Are answers speculating on what the problem might be considered answers? — MisterMiyagi 30 secs ago
Ugh. "No", but if you ask 10 people you'll probably get like at least 6 yes and 4 no. That poor excuse for an answer is really pushing it. — Gimby 36 secs ago
NAA is for answers that aren't even attempts at answers. "Try X" is an attempt and can very well be correct/useful despite being very low quality. — Kevin B 23 secs ago
This specific answers looks like a bad ripoff of the currently best scored answer. — MisterMiyagi 36 secs ago
I as a user of Stack Overflow do not find an answer, from somebody without some certainty or authority, to be very helpful. I expect the author of the answer to verify, as a high level, that the answer they submitted in their opinion does in fact answer my question. I as an author of answers in the past find it difficult to do that in every single case. In this case the answer you are asking about, is an exact duplicate of a 3 year old answer, and isn't helpful for that reason. — Security Hound 45 secs ago
7:17 PM
@jabaa that's like saying "6 lashes isn't punishment" when one would've sufficed — java-addict301 55 secs ago
@java-addict301 Downvotes aren't a punishment. This platform is based on a voting system. The question is unclear and not good. 7 users (87,5% of the voters) downvoted the question and 1 user (12,5% of the voters) upvoted the question. The vote has nothing to do with the asker. We didn't punish the user. We voted the quality of the question. — jabaa 34 secs ago
7:45 PM
Based on the screenshot, this is not actually an issue with understanding the code formatting. It's an issue with the automatic filter wrongly detecting "unformatted code", which happens from time to time. — Karl Knechtel 1 min ago
@PresidentJamesK.Polk I understand, but keeping visible such a downvoted question is humiliating and does not provide anything useful to others — Mark 51 secs ago
My comment about my comment flag getting declined by mods has been removed. Wow. — Salman A 42 secs ago
8:12 PM
Reminder: How much research effort is expected of Stack Overflow users? "A lot. Asking a question on Stack Overflow should be the last step in your process for finding an answer—if the information that you need already exists, then you should be able to find it before asking. You want to Search. Like mad. Read documentation. Test your code. Troubleshoot. Read blogs. Find books. Follow tutorials." — jabaa 26 secs ago
8:23 PM
@java-addict301 I vote the quality of a question. I don't punish the user. If you think that the voting/reputation system is wrong or broken, it's a different question. Here, we discuss if the 7 downvotes are appropriate. I think they are. I think, the close reason is correct (the question is still unclear), but I think it should be closed as duplicate. I think, users on Stack Overflow should invest more research effort before asking a question. I don't know the user and I don't want to punish the user. But I want to downvote a bad question. — jabaa 12 secs ago
8:43 PM
This question isn't a complaint, it's a request for understanding what happened and whether something was to be corrected on either end in future cases. News flash: coming here to Meta SO to ask why moderators did something in an unexpected way happens all the time. It would be far worse if we couldn't do that. While we did elect the moderators, but we still expect them to moderate in a way which does not deviate significantly with the consensus within the rest of the moderation team. — E_net4 36 secs ago
"You did the wrong thing by coming here and asking why your flag was declined." No, they didn't. People have been asking for clarifications and challenging moderators decisions on Meta since forever. These questions are particularly helpful in explaining what the sites tools including flags mean and how they should be used and handled. This is healthy and desirable. — Islam Hassan 59 secs ago
I must add that this answer reeks of mixed signals: 1) why would you suggest that I did the right thing despite the flag being declined, followed by telling me not to post the exact question which clarified that I did in fact the right thing? 2) voting to close the question as opinion based and immediately posting an answer after finding out that it won't be closed is incoherent, and further reinforces the idea that the failed attempts at closing this question were unwarranted. — E_net4 59 secs ago
9:06 PM
@Mark i do agree, i think the issue here is in the weight of voting in general. I don't think people like yourself should feel punished because you asked about something that was a bit outside of your comfort zone, but the post itself does need to be rated correctly so that it'll be handled by the site properly in the long run. That you feel punished is by design, the idea is a mix of both positive and negative reinforcement will push people in the right direction. Even now, downvotes only remove 2 rep compared to upvotes giving 10, but i don't think the rep lost is the thing that hurts. — Kevin B 44 secs ago
CORS is one of those topics that I find super frustrating when it comes to people asking questions on SO and i'm probably not alone. The concept hasn't changed significantly since IE finally started supporting it and yet even today people often try to solve these problems in ways that don't make sense because there's so many wrong answers out there on the internet (and even on SO!) about how to solve CORS errors. — Kevin B 43 secs ago
9:29 PM
@AbdulAzizBarkat: Or if you're not sure that the Python version is relevant at all for the kind of problem in the question, you could say "Using Python 3.7.1 might solve the problem". Then it's still an "I think this might work" answer phrased in the form of an answer instead of a question. That could be an appropriate edit for an editor who also doesn't know the answer to the actual question. — Peter Cordes 23 secs ago
10:03 PM
The mod in question was a new mod, who admitted they made a mistake and as a result will handle things better in the future. That's a positive outcome. Alternately, posts questioning moderation decisions often lead to the mod providing an explanation for why they did it, which the OP and other people would hopefully learn from, which would also be a positive outcome. Either way, there's nothing wrong with asking about it on Meta as long as you're civil about it. — John Montgomery 1 min ago
I am definitely not going to comment on whether anyone should think any of your posts were assisted by AI. But I'm not sure anyone here can answer you definitively about why someone else might think they were. That person might be able to? Also - and again this is nothing about your posts specifically - just because an answer gets up-voted and accepted and bountied, doesn't mean it wasn't built with AI. It just means it was helpful to at least one person, period. They might think it was helped by AI, but they don't care. Or they don't know. Or they don't care either way. — Aaron Bertrand 57 secs ago
Someone commenting "this looks like AI" is just like any other drive-by comment you might read or hear anywhere. It's really hard for anyone to guess the motivation of the person who said it. It's even harder for anyone to have confidence in their guess. — Aaron Bertrand 21 secs ago
And without commenting on the AI aspect, I will say that the downvotes I can see on your answers are on answers that I'd quantify as "lists of things to try and do" and not answers per say. I don't think they're necessarily worthy of downvoting for that, but some users do. — Anon Coward 22 secs ago
So, is there anyway to prove them wrong
> doubtful. People are going to think what they're going to think. How can I prove to you that I wrote this comment without AI? do I just have to accept the fact that some people think I’m a lying robot!?
Man, if I worried about what anonymous people leaving comments in random places on the Internet really thought about me, I'd turn off all my computers and go live in a cave. — Aaron Bertrand 17 secs agoHaha yes- thankyou all for your kind answers- I don’t actually really care as long as the actual aksers are satisfied- as it is their question! — Hman66 54 secs ago
having looked at your answer posts, I for one am quite confident that they are edited AIGC. If you are telling the truth that you aren't using AI in writing your posts, and that those comments are unwarranted, flag them as "no longer needed" and keep doing what you are doing and find out where that leads you. — user 53 secs ago
Thanks for the feedback- I will take note for further answers- even though I don’t… I see how you might see them that way — Hman66 39 secs ago
10:49 PM
10:59 PM
The exact criteria is deliberately kept secret on stupidity (and in general hostility). They say it is to "prevent people from gaming the system", but that is clearly BS (both gaming the system on this way, and both preventing this gaming is very ineffective ways to reach their goals). — peterh just now
@Makyen I’ll add a photo but, it’s a good point I forgot to mention. Manually setting the SO theme has little to no effect, the problem remains ie SO in light mode, still looks dark, with crazy borders.. In fact the UI is so garbled that interfaces such as toggles and buttons are not indicating state clearly, so the issue really effects fundamental usability. — orionrush 31 secs ago
So what do you propose for (for example) a question which is diagnosing a difficult library bug, or a network connectivity issue? Every single debugging comment goes in the answer box? That's ridiculous. Once you have an actual "this is the reason why" or even "this is a possible issue that has been seen" then you could write an answer, otherwise it's just pure speculation and belongs in comments. — Charlieface 24 secs ago
11:14 PM
Uncertainty and weasel words don't make it not-an-answer. It is still an attempt to answer the question and it would be an appropriate to flag it for deletion. Such answers are not high quality and you can vote appropriately or ask for more information in a comment. — Stephen Ostermiller ♦ just now
@PresidentJamesK.Polk this occurred to me too, however website engineers have been implementing browsers specific fixes since CERN, so hoping for an upstream fix would really be a very poor choice, especially since this issue degrades UX to the point of interfering with basic accessibility. — orionrush 10 secs ago
Uncertainty and weasel words don't make it not-an-answer. It is still an attempt to answer the question and it would be an appropriate to flag it for deletion. Such answers are not high quality and you can vote appropriately or ask for more information in a comment. — Stephen Ostermiller ♦ 1 min ago
It worth referring to the other resolved question as the OP does outline and provide reference screenshots of some of the different phases of SO theme loading. On first load the first paint a flash of the light theme, followed by the correctly rendered dark them, again followed by the Edge abomination. meta.stackoverflow.com/a/429844/362445 — orionrush 19 secs ago
@StephenOstermiller: It's not a good answer, but if the guess is actually correct, someone who knows that can later edit to firm it up. It depends on the details of the question and answer; the opening sentence of this answer points out that some guesses shouldn't have been posted as answers at all. — Peter Cordes 42 secs ago
@StephenOstermiller: Also, wait, if it's not a non-answer, why would it be appropriate to flag for deletion? — Peter Cordes 42 secs ago
Sorry, edited my comment to correct it, I had dictated it on my phone. darn auto correct — Stephen Ostermiller ♦ 40 secs ago
Yeah..., hum-hum-hum..., I reviewed all your 7 Answers, the one you linked to from 20 April is actually the least "obvious", I would say..., but all your Answers (from yesterday) all feel quite strongly ChatGPT-generated to me also, with some slight personal Edits here and there... You demonstrate a lot a of knowledge in very different Areas of Expertise, even writing one long and complex Answer in about 10 min (after the previous one you just posted before). — chivracq 52 secs ago
@chivracq - Only one was slightly modified and only because including the suggestion to ask the question on Stack Overflow would have been too obvious for anyone to ignore — Security Hound 32 secs ago
Does this answer your question? Why is it a bad idea to tell other users publicly why you believe something is (or is not) from ChatGPT (or other AI)? — philipxy 46 secs ago
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