00:00 - 15:0015:00 - 00:00
12:12 AM
Related to the 2nd problem, see Is it mandatory for candidates to answer the moderator election questionnaire? — bad_coder 50 secs ago
Smac, @EJoshuaS understands your question, but he is saying (and I agree) that it is the responsibility of anyone asking a question that they proofread their question carefully before posting, that there is never a time limit placed on how long one must take to craft a question and that rushing to post one that is half-baked shouldn't encourage. Most new site members don't realize how hard it is to ask a decent and well-received question, and while the lesson learned from an early mistake may be a harsh one, hopefully, it will be an effective one. — Hovercraft Full Of Eels 1 min ago
@VLAZ Yes, I understand that, but trying to change others behaviour is always difficult. If enough people above do the above actions, maybe they will realise what they are doing is a problem. — Dijkgraaf 39 secs ago
12:42 AM
its very hard to search for "image-js" because there is a lot of "image js" unrelated results, most people tag it as
image
which is not correct. stackoverflow.com/questions/69549485/… — Jabbar 1 min ago12:54 AM
The six dots are a indication that you need to drag the names. I've seen it before in other software (although it's not too intuitive at first); — 10 Rep 8 secs ago
To extend on the closing remarks: Personally, if an assignment is due by 11:59PM Sunday evening, I'll likely submit it at 11:58:59PM—even if, in practice, I actually completed the assignment a week prior. That gives me every opportunity to reevaluate my answer. (Acknowledging that self nominations can be edited.) — Jeremy Caney 40 secs ago
(Of course, just last week, I attempted to submit an assignment at 11:58PM, only to encounter a technical roadblock that prevented the submission from going through. YMMV.) — Jeremy Caney 1 min ago
@Spectric Not chopped off a the bottom. But chopped off at the top. However in that part of the page one can scroll over the whole widget. Also, at the chosen magnification the active part of the widget is accessible without scrolling. This does not change the fact that the design is <adjective>. — philipxy 1 min ago
@CodyGray Assuming good faith is important. We should do so here. However, I'd be surprised if the candidate didn't know comments were locked once the election began. They ran for SO moderator in 2018, and were elected on Data Science in 2019. The old election system also locked comments once the election began, or at least that it did so in both 2019 and 2020 (I don't recall personally testing it in other years). So, I'd give the explanation of "didn't know" a low probability. That doesn't mean we shouldn't still assume good faith. — Makyen ♦ 35 secs ago
I wonder how many voters even look at the comments. I happened to read through them during the nomination phase, but when I went to cross-reference them during voting, I found it unintuitive. I imagine that more casual voters who weren't looking for them would miss the comments entirely. If I'm right, this likely only has a marginal impact. (Personally, I'd like to see the nomination comments far more discoverable; the discussions in the comments can be really insightful.) — Jeremy Caney 1 min ago
My good faith assumption here is simply that they were on the fence about nominating themselves, and were rushed to squeeze in a nomination before the deadline. If this was purely strategic, I imagine they'd have included answers to the questionnaire. Otherwise, it seems like a pretty poor strategy; I can't imagine someone who didn't take the time to answer the questionnaire getting much traction. — Jeremy Caney 46 secs ago
1:57 AM
To @HovercraftFullOfEels point - this is a perfect example of question where author did not demonstrate the research effort nor getting improved for at least 6 hours... As an example of what could have significantly improved the question would be data on how many questions are improved before suggested "timeout" period vs. some other time (so far we have single data point - this question is not improved in 6 hours so 5-10 minutes timeout would not in any way help). Additionally explaining how the proposal to essentially "let's answer duplicates" makes site better would be nice. — Alexei Levenkov 52 secs ago
It is known (also somewhat controversial) practice to downvote duplicate answer - it definitely looks like the question is duplicate (and you knew that as you put link in the answer) as well your answer is essentially identical to one on the duplicate... — Alexei Levenkov 1 min ago
Minor point: Since the answer is accepted, OP is not in a position to delete it. It would require a mod flag, or 3 privileged users to do so. — cigien 51 secs ago
This case is definitely not an accidental - the link to the duplicate is the main part of the answer. — Alexei Levenkov 42 secs ago
This makes sense. It seems I shouldn't have answered the question at all but instead mark as duplicate and link to the existing answer. However, isn't that rather inefficient since it requires all users to follow another link before seeing the unpopular answer? Also, it seems this is just pushing the ire against my answer down the line to the original question answerer. — pirateofebay 29 secs ago
@pirateofebay Not all users: visitors to the site who aren't logged in (which is probably even the majority of visitors) will be automatically redirected to the duplicate. The general idea is that the dupe target eventually gets the high google ranking, and dupes add ways for differently worded queries to find their way to that same Q&A. — wim 1 min ago
Btw the comments on your answer are not disparaging, and it looks more like just "me too" frustration votes agreeing with the comment to me- the answer actually only has two DVs. Those are rookie numbers :) — wim 1 min ago
Would not it be nice if Linux source code is publicly available under some sort of Open Source license so people could look at history and read commit descriptions when interested. And add such information to their historical question... Ohhh well - not a perfect world we live in :) — Alexei Levenkov 43 secs ago
BTW, @user239216 is you find a time API that is not "little messy" stick to that language/framework/platform forever (or at least till next daylight saving date change :) ) — Alexei Levenkov 29 secs ago
@AlexeiLevenkov I'm glad you pointed that out. It was amusing to watch this question receive 9 downvotes within the first 6 minutes of asking, and nobody had left a comment or said anything QED. What research are you talking about? 5 different people sending notifications at once, with the majority focused on why it is wrong to even THINK of such a question; As the OP, am I supposed to make up a new question to satisfy them, and what improvement could I possibly have made when nobody had actually engaged with the question? Let's not play games. There is a problem, but everyone is playing safe — smac89 1 min ago
@JeremyCaney - I specifically put him last because he didn't fill out the questionnaire. — SomethingDark 30 secs ago
Perhaps disparaging is a bit strongly worded :) I'll start the process to delete my answer (assuming I receive the required votes). As a hypothetical follow-up, if this answer was not answering a duplicate but still was not well received due to unpopularity, is deletion still the correct course of action? — pirateofebay 1 min ago
@smac89 ??? You've posted feature-request which is essentially "please vote up or down if you agree or disagree". What other information you wanted from those votes - "disagree" repeated 9 times? How that would be helpful? Indeed you also got comments that it was discussed before - you did nothing to edit the question so it is no longer duplicate... — Alexei Levenkov 46 secs ago
The "The purpose of closure is to prevent users from wasting their time answering an unfit question." comment in particular is absolutely not addressed in the question as it stands now - your proposal is to do opposite - allow (and hence encourage) answers to questions that either not fit for the site or duplicates. Why you decided not to address that with an edit is kind of confusing. — Alexei Levenkov 54 secs ago
Kind of hard to get behind your proposal which is roughly "let's copy all answers from 'What is NRE' to every question related to NRE instead of closing"... — Alexei Levenkov 48 secs ago
@AlexeiLevenkov Except it's not "instead of closing" in fact, that's the very first thing I mentioned (under
1.
above). ;) Moreover, we don't close questions for being "related" so in that case you're assuming they're not duplicate questions. Why should we even factor in whether or not a related but non duplicate question has the same answer on it. That's an externality that has no value to those asking the question or searching. Why can't the normal mechanisms to rank and rate answers function in isolation of other submissions on the site? — Evan Carroll 1 min ago@AlexeiLevenkov, not true. My suggestion is to extend the amount of time before the process of voting to close the question starts. The reason for this suggestion is already stated in the question rationale. So far nothing about this question breaks any sort of guidelines, so I see no reason to edit it. Until it is finally deleted, the question serves as proof of why it exists. The comments section is sufficient for engagement, or someone can leave a proper answer, which is always appreciated — smac89 just now
@SomethingDark: I specifically didn’t even include them in my vote because of that. — Jeremy Caney 1 min ago
@SomethingDark And that's the most appropriate response to this: if you don't like the action(s), vote accordingly — Machavity ♦ 1 min ago
3:37 AM
@Makyen The election system has been completely revamped recently. It is reasonable to assume that the old bugs/limitations had been removed/fixed. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
It's pretty cool how you can just call a
noConflict
function to make it so. Imagine if moderators had that option available to them! — Cody Gray ♦ 13 secs ago3:50 AM
@CodyGray In many places, I'd assume that revamping a system would substitute new bugs/unintentional limitations for the old ones. Disabling the comments during the election phase appeared to be an intentional choice. As such, it's something I' would have assumed would not change. I think it should change, primarily because there's no longer a separate MSO question containing the questionnaire answers on which discussion could continue. Such discussion, even during the election, has been valuable and important in prior years. — Makyen ♦ 20 secs ago
4:10 AM
@HovercraftFullOfEels Exactly my point - it's very important that people take time to formulate their questions carefully before they post (not post a question that's riddled with errors and fix it only after the fact). A grace period would encourage people to post questions prematurely knowing that people can't downvote for 10 minutes. — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica just now
The FAQ Q&A on why feedback isn't mandatory for downvotes is highly relevant here, and many of the points directly address the reason that this post has been received so poorly. In particular: "...downvoters are doing the site a service, and making voting more difficult would impede the site's most important quality-control tool." — EJoshuaS - Reinstate Monica 1 min ago
@AndrasDeak, sorry I have caused so much consternation. Mondays are the busiest day of the week, and I am not a fast writer. Was there some philosophical point in this year's questionnaire that you did not find at least somewhat covered in my 2018 questionnaire? — Stephen Rauch 1 min ago
@StephenRauch The idea is not that Andras should individually receive personal feedback about this, and the issue is much larger than just him, as the votes should at least somewhat communicate. — Félix Adriyel Gagnon-Grenier 1 min ago
4:49 AM
5:29 AM
It’s also worth noting that the early feedback offered in the comments gives candidates an opportunity to refine their candidate statement in order to address weaknesses or misunderstandings—an opportunity this candidate did not receive. Those improvements are almost certainly more visible to most voters than the comments themselves. — Jeremy Caney 1 min ago
@smac89 - To be fair I thought it was obvious the reason this question was getting downvotes. — Security Hound 40 secs ago
You can use Google to easily determine if the text is copied from elsewhere. Then, having concluded its originality, you can look further to see when it was first posted to the election page. I think you will then have all of the information that you need to make a decision. — Cody Gray ♦ just now
I'm quite sure both of these bots were scheduled on the same machine and the later one did a dirty read on initialization. — Evan Carroll 50 secs ago
Thanks @CodyGray, it's early for me, I should have thought of both of those :D Having answered the question, I'm in two minds about whether or not to leave this post here. It feels a little unfair to highlight the similarity. — DaveyDaveDave 1 min ago
Doesn't seem unfair to me. You aren't slinging accusations. People can make their own decisions about what it means, as well as do their own independent confirmation. — Cody Gray ♦ 51 secs ago
6:05 AM
That this only comes up today is probably indicative on how much weight is given to candidate answers to the questionnair when choosing who to vote. — yivi 56 secs ago
@Jabbar that last one is not about image-js, it's about node-canvas. It's just that one of the modules their is called image.js, but once again no relation with image-js. — Kaiido 48 secs ago
@yivi To be fair, It's hard to compare given the SO design. SO should've put each of their answers side by side or designed it that one question has all answers by all contestants - similar to the question/ answer format followed by all tags in the rest of SO. — TheMaster 6 secs ago
Here is an algorithm for you:- 1) If duplicate(A, B): close(A); answer(B). 2) else if answers(P, A) and answers(P, B) then tailorAndAnswer(P, A); tailorAndAnswer(P, B). 3) else answer(A); answer(B). If you believe two questions are not duplicates yet think one answer can answer both tailor your answer for each question! Duplicating content is just redundant and laziness on your part (and potentially gaming / abusing the system). — Abdul Aziz Barkat 1 min ago
@yivi Today is the first day of voting. It makes sense that today would be the first day that someone reads the questionnaire answers carefully. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Good point, @Cody. Hadn't thought of it that way. Personally, I've already cast my votes and yeah, I confess to have only read a couple of answers per candidate, at most. — yivi 47 secs ago
@Braiam in terms of what I was asking, I don't see the duplication. In effect I wanted to know what the "0" meant and specifically what actions would be required to take to change it to, for example, 1. I was not really asking about the philosophy of articles on Stack Overflow. However, I take it that the answer is that it refers to nothing - as the idea has not really been implemented. There is no action that I could take to change that number. — Bruce 48 secs ago
@AbdulAzizBarkat what's it like to not read the post and to write a lengthy comment, never did that before? — Evan Carroll 47 secs ago
6:42 AM
@wim Your answer has an inaccuracy. Moderators can not explicitly issue a ban on a user creating chat rooms. We can suspend a user from chat completely, but not separately apply the restriction on creating rooms. As far as I'm aware, the only way that the chat room creation ban can be triggered is for the user to be kicked from one or more chat rooms 3 or more times within 24 hours. They can be kicked by ROs, moderators, or CMs. Moderators can manually remove the chat room creation ban, but not add it. — Makyen ♦ 1 min ago
6:59 AM
It was confusing at first to see no answers for this year's questions and only a brief "who am I statement". The timings then led me to think that perhaps they had a last minute change of heart and rushed to get their nomination in. I felt like I didn't have a feel for the candidate's handling of situations in the immediately digestible way the nomination questions present. However, the link to 2018 election meant I could track to their answers then and I rather like many of those responses. They gave me a better "feel" for the candidate. — QHarr 19 secs ago
it seems that the system is flawed, rather than the candidate. What should be the system would be not allowing comments until AFTER the candidates are known, and then allowing comments for a set period. That way, and only that way, can people know all the candidates when commenting and have the same time to comment on all of them. — jwenting 57 secs ago
7:22 AM
what is the use of multiple identical answers given over a period of time. beides that some gahters points — nbk 55 secs ago
@JeanneDark I wrote that I assumed why my answer was downvoted which is a slight difference. — jay.sf 44 secs ago
Not really any difference. The downvoter likely felt that the answer was "not useful", as it was adequately covered on the duplicate. — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? Why shouldn't I assume I know who downvoted my post? — Jeanne Dark 1 min ago
^ Assuming who downvoted is problem #1. Problem number 2 is downright assuming revenge and unwelcomingness over a downvote, even though users are in their right to vote based on how useful they feel your answer is. It also appears that more than one user has contested your reopen. — E_net4 the candidate supporter 1 min ago
The second link in this question is about serial downvotes, hardly what happened here. Your public reputation timeline shows a single downvote on the answer that some people likely thought was not useful. — E_net4 the candidate supporter 1 min ago
So wait a sec, Stephen vows to spend at least 30 minutes per day to SO, but didn't find time to complete the questionnaire and self-nominate for the whole week until the very last second? — mickmackusa 1 min ago
I suppose if I ever run, I'll self-nominate at the last second too so that I don't get roasted like Zoe did in the comments. — mickmackusa 44 secs ago
@mickmackusa make sure you let me know when you nominate so I can get an umbrella to protect me from the flying pigs... :) — Nick 19 secs ago
Err, what? You agree that "elections are largely decided by uninformed ... users", and yet you're going to base your decision solely on a single, flawed numeric metric? I am not trying to tell you that Stephen Rauch is a poor choice of candidate, but I feel that your answer is self-contradictory, and I think it is represents the epitome of "uninformed" to not at least avail yourself of the information that was provided (e.g., his answers to a previous year's questionnaire), much less reading the other candidates' answers. — Cody Gray ♦ 19 secs ago
@CodyGray I'm just vocalizing what I assume is a thought process of many if not most voters — Coderino Javarino 1 min ago
Could Stephen predict that some members of the public would be wondering the reason for the last second nomination? Shouldn't that detail be included in the nomination text? Shouldn't we crave moderators that err on the side of being explanatory rather than provocative? If there was no gaming here, then I would have expected an explanation as to why the nomination text did not include answers to the questionnaire. If there is a legitimate reason for not having time to post the nomination days earlier, then I would expect to read that too. — mickmackusa 20 secs ago
I see. I still think this answer is confusing, then. Maybe you should consider rephrasing? It sounds like you are advocating this approach, rather than just describing what you think is an unfortunate reality (and consequence of displaying a nearly meaningless numeric metric). — Cody Gray ♦ 1 min ago
8:10 AM
Posting them as individual questions on meta would be a bit noisy, and could be problematic because non-candidates could post answers... but then again, I don't think it would be terrible. — yivi 46 secs ago
@yivi Yeah, posting answers as comments works when there's one thread per candidate...maybe it'd work if the questions were for specific candidates? I don't know. I'm also not entirely sure what the point of this question is in the first place, given that the election is already in the sidebar :-) — Ryan M just now
This isn't unprecedented, this has happened on other SE sites. It is a known flaw in the election system, which can be exploited intentionally but also by chance or circumstance. It's not that easy to fix without prolonging the election period, which SE was rather reluctant to consider in the past. — Mad Scientist 1 min ago
Does this answer your question? The backlog of reviews in the First questions review queue is increasing (specifically, Yaakov's answer describing the changes) — Ryan M 23 secs ago
@Bruce You could get yourself hired by one of the companies which have a collective for their product and then write an article ... but waiting until (if at all) normal users can write them is probably easier.. — samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz 34 secs ago
9:00 AM
@FabioMendesSoares strong disagreement that Stack Overflow has real world rules, I will reject the notion that anything digital is real life. It is merely a reflection of real life with it's own unique set of rules and standards... just like games tend to be. I find Stack Overflow and especially reviewing to be more like video games than anything else. You have rules to follow, you have hitpoints, you will rage from time to time, you spend ammunition, you shoot at things, etc. etc. — Gimby 28 secs ago
...and could they also not be hidden on the nomination tab with no indication to look there? — Ryan M 59 secs ago
You can go back to the nomination phase to see them but that is annoying stackoverflow.com/election/13?tab=nomination — Sam Dean 1 min ago
"With that question"? What about questions 1, 2 and 10? The answers seem very similar there as well... — Tomerikoo 27 secs ago
Information about bookmarks is public, and can be searched via SEDE with the right query (which I don't have offhand, but someone probably does). — Ryan M 14 secs ago
I would take this behavior as a useful signal for determining how to vote on the candidate, rather than a call to pitchforks. — cs95 54 secs ago
The thing is that comments suck quite a bit for this. Not only they are hidden, but the long threads are not particularly friendly. So I agree, if we use comments there is no reason to close them 7 days before the end of the election, but in the end a better tool would be better for this. (See my related question, if you want). — yivi 1 min ago
I struggled with whether to point this out at all (and ignored it until I saw this), because I really do think you're an incredible asset to the community, based on your dedicated work in SOCVR and SOBotics. But a few of these answers really do seem to be heavily based on other candidates' answers. — Ryan M 35 secs ago
I have an impression that Shree has some difficulty with expressing their thoughts in English. All answers are very brief. In such cases it is tempting to use some ready phrases that are available. — Tadeusz Kopec 1 min ago
9:55 AM
Indeed, perhaps if there would be no possibility for comments putting you on the chopping block this person would have posted the nomination a lot sooner; I would have also been taken aback by the comments under Zoe's nomination to be honest, that might have been a trigger to make this decision. — Gimby 30 secs ago
10:14 AM
@Dharman I often ask myself that about the documentation I write for services built :) — Gimby 14 secs ago
@Gimby okay that is your point of view, I am not supposed to see the same way you do. My point is that the purpose of this platform is to help people solve their problems (including real world ones), and reviewing improves quality, flags and filters inappropriate content. As long as you are using this ( and any) system, you must follow rules irrespective of agreeing with them or not. In video games you can kill people, that's part of the fun, but here abuses are punished because Stack Overflow wants to keep being a top source of troubleshooting. — Fabio Mendes Soares 1 min ago
if the moderator(knowing the system) hasn't commented so as to avoid getting flagged but lets another moderator take the fall? — Archana David 16 secs ago
Usually, these would be the recommended actions, but if they were enough I would have no reason to make this post. This doesn't really work. They might get a hint, but not all of them. The problem is how to provide all of them with guidance so that they can follow Stack Overflow quality guidances. — Dharman 6 secs ago
Is there another way to raise a flag? I thought raising flags can happen with their comments on your post — Archana David 23 secs ago
@StephenRauch A question for you, then: You mention visiting Meta every day for the last three years or so, but you haven't posted on Meta once in that time. Apart from reviews (of which you've done many), your Meta activity in the past couple years appears limited to a handful of comments and some minor housekeeping on tag wikis. Would you expect that to change if you were elected? Why or why not? — Ryan M 1 min ago
@CoderinoJavarino I've rephrased the answer to what appears to be how you intended. Feel free to rollback or edit further if you think it doesn't reflect your point. — 41686d6564 49 secs ago
10:54 AM
Related FR of mine on Meta.SE: Why are the "off-topic" flag options (including "blatantly off-topic") listed under "needs improvement"? — 41686d6564 9 secs ago
11:10 AM
Thank you for your honesty in this answer. Please also consider responding to the similarities to Ryan's answers. I will think better of you as a candidate if you do. — Alex Waygood 53 secs ago
I knew that particular example would come up, but I still believe the questions should be answerable by any candidate. So for a question like that, it should IMO be posted in such a way that any other candidate could chime in, if possible, or not at all. But that's just my opinion, I'm pretty much against about 1-on-1 Q&As for our format. — yivi 1 min ago
@JeanneDark I tried the names, the avatars, the 6 dots, and several spots in the black spaces around the names. — Jen R 54 secs ago
Maybe it's because you are trying to vote for the wrong candidates? Try voting for the right ones, it will probably work then. /s — yivi 31 secs ago
Are there any errors in the Developer Tools' console? I can't reproduce it with the same browser/version (also using dark mode). — Ivar 57 secs ago
@StephenOstermiller I didn't revert any edit. I was editing the question at the same time, and you'll probably notice that my edit is not exactly the same as yours. — yivi 43 secs ago
Honestly, if the comments weren't locked I am all but sure at least one person would have asked them why; but the fact they are (and i feel that it's an incredibly important question) means that (from my perspective) getting an answer to said question outweighs the suggestion of making them candidate agnostic. — Larnu 1 min ago
11:49 AM
@Makoto "Note that I'm being meticulously careful on this point, since I feel like a lot of people want to jump on a bandwagon and either laud or crucify a candidate for some specific reason, when the simplest thing may be to...just...not vote for them...if you think this is unbecoming of a moderator " I think this is what the OP was saying. Your answer and comments are reflecting that back. Which is fine, but not ellipsis-level revelatory. — Rob Grant 29 secs ago
to second StephenOstermiller, do you see this giant warning message by any chance? — Oleg Valter 1 min ago
12:12 PM
@Tomerikoo Question 3 as well: "(I've found that dupes require domain knowledge a lot more frequently than a few of the other close categories), getting more eyes on it before taking action matters." (Zoe) vs. "I've discovered that dupes necessitate domain expertise far more frequently than some of the other close categories, so getting other eyes on it before acting is critical." (Shree) — Ryan M just now
The title of this question and the content somehow do not correspond well to each other. You didn't really ask for the vague answer to be expanded. You expanded it (which is fine). Now you ask if you should change the question afterwards and I think there are already such discussions on meta here. This question could show more research. — Trilarion 33 secs ago
12:27 PM
Another workaround: You can make your browser window narrower. That will trigger the mobile layout which doesn't have the fixed sidebar. — Stephen Ostermiller 41 secs ago
@pirateofebay Not really, but it's up to you though. If you feel your answer is useful, then you should leave it up even if it's unpopular. If there's constructive feedback in the comments, try to incorporate that as far as possible, of course. — cigien 54 secs ago
12:42 PM
There is no "liking" on Stack Overflow. And no, upvoting is not the same as "liking". When you upvote a post, you are telling others that the post is of high quality; that it is useful; if it is a question, that it shows research effort and is clear. — Heretic Monkey 15 secs ago
1:19 PM
Another, more recent related MSE feature request (shameless plug): meta.stackexchange.com/questions/370962/… — TylerH 47 secs ago
It is also inappropriate to use multiple account to get around bans; see meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/262060 — Stephen C 43 secs ago
There is nothing called "likes" on Stack Overflow, I assume the OP means upvotes. You do get notifications when someone upvotes your post in the form of a notification that your reputation increased. This notification is shown on the achievements button, right next to the notification button. — Donald Duck 1 min ago
For what it's worth, I'm seeing this same behavior. I have JavaScript enabled, Google Chrome Version 94.0.4606.81 (Official Build) (x86_64), macOS 11.6, and, though I have Privacy Badger installed, I get the same thing even if I disable for the site. — thesquaregroot 1 min ago
@Shree I assume you already know but if you don't, there are a lot of grammar extensions that can help you improve your writing skills like grammarly, not endorsing grammarly, that's the only one I am aware of, you can find more. — ThunderKnight 29 secs ago
1:55 PM
@AndrasDeak You never know what someone is going through, it might have been unintentional, if you ask him, he will probably say that he is glad he was able to submit his candidature. I am not extremely gullible but he should be given one chance as he is already a mod on another website, his work is of great importance, let's appreciate it rather than pointing it out. I am a college student and I have literally missed submitting my assignments by 2 minutes, or just submitted that a minute ago, that can happen. Sometimes you get busy with personal problems but you still have to move on. — ThunderKnight 57 secs ago
This usually happens if the page did not load all scripts. Do you use something like
noscript
or have a slow/unstable connection? — samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz 1 min agoAre you getting any errors in the developer console? There was an issue yesterday that was theoretically fixed. — Nick 41 secs ago
This happened to other people yesterday. It was mentioned in the election chat room — Scratte 20 secs ago
@samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz Thanks for you comment. No, I didn't use anything like
noscript
. And I believed my internet connection is quite stable. It works properly until today morning. — JackGorBeatCo 22 secs ago@JackGorBeatCo Several people seems to have problems with scripts today, e.g. meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/412373/… — samcarter_is_at_topanswers.xyz 54 secs ago
Does this answer your question? 2021 Moderator Election - Ballot doesn't work — isherwood 42 secs ago
FWIW I've pinged the member of staff who reported the fix for a similar issue yesterday as this seems heavily related: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/370955/… — Nick 1 min ago
I'm experiencing the same problem (latest version of Firefox, no add-ons). I came here looking for this question. — vallismortis 1 min ago
I'm not required when posting the image, but if I draw an image and post it on SO, any future visitor is required to attribute it to me when they use the picture elsewhere. because it is shared under CC-BY-SA. If a brand made the drawing, and made it available for use, I would find it problematic to remove the watermark, not to leave it in. — lucidbrot 1 min ago
@nbk same reason non-identical answers are useful: they help the person asking the question, and the people searching for the answer. How does it affect the value proposition because the content exists elsewhere? — Evan Carroll 1 min ago
2:39 PM
You're just clicking the button before the page loads completely. There must be a duplicate I can't find at the moment... — Tomerikoo 52 secs ago
Related: Don't have topbar links open my global profile when the page isn't fully loaded and the linked posts. — Sebastian Simon 8 secs ago
@AndrasDeak maybe check the definition of "democracy". Hint: it doesn't mean that only candidates you like get on the ballot or win. — mike3996 36 secs ago
MSE duplicate of Review queues not working because of JavaScript error - clearing cache solves the issue, as mentioned in the question after edit. — Rafael Tavares 46 secs ago
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