so apparently there's a concept in data science of a "Shapley value", presumably named after someone. There's a shapley that has a few questions related to that, and also a shap library with its own tag that apparently does something related
however, there's also a popular Python library called shapely, and questions about it can get mistagged due to a typo
I went through and retagged as appropriate; there are now only 9 questions... what I'm wondering is if it causes harm to have a tag that's accidentally typo-squatting
also in "so apparently": the system currently considers Python keeps saying Module Not found error an acceptable title, but not Why do I get a Module Not found error? which IMO is clearer and demonstrably less silly
I recently came across this answer. The answerer's profile acknowledges that
We are an AI Generated response community, we are real humans who want to help people.
The answer has an explaination and code at the top, while at the bottom, a boldface section states human here:, and then gives furt...
@CodyGray As VLAZ mostly correctly notes, it doesn't detect repeating stuff that's one "word" (which doesn't actually use \b as described but might as well): github.com/Charcoal-SE/SmokeDetector/blob/…
it's also dependent on the percentage of the post that the repetitive content makes up
> If this helps you please upvote. This is brought to you by Creative AIs, bringing AI generated solutions to everyone. :) If you are curious about us check out our bio. Stack Overflow can be a toxic place and we are trying to change that for the better :) We hope this solution helps!
oh good grief
Nope, not okay, this code is obviously non-functional
@KarlKnechtel Ryan is correct. The cutoff is 40 characters "Why am I getting a Module Not found error?" would pass. Your variant that fails validation is 38 characters while the accepted title is 42. The regex is here in case you ever want to game the system
@HenryEcker Yeah, I have sort of mixed feelings seeing that it actually works, but if you're going to skirt the line it's also sort of incumbent on you to check that it works as you pasted it.
Yeah, it could be messy. Tried to put some positive gloss on things:
Separately from all of the above and the rest of the discussion: Thank you for weighing in. It's important that we get a variety of perspectives on how and whether it might be possible for AI-generated content to exist responsibly within this ecosystem. — Ryan M ♦1 min ago
@PranavHosangadi Fair enough I cannot say I disagree but no worries I wont be posting anymore, I thought I was being helpful but I am not trying to waste peoples time and honestly I do get quite busy throughout the days anyway I will just put more time and effort into my videos :) — Creative AIs7 mins ago
I'm not sure how you class a "I take my ball and going home" comment.
I found weird the argument that wrong answers are to be expected. Everybody makes mistakes. Which is true (I am known to seldom not make a mistake) but I feel like if you're trying to show off how cool AI is and how you're good at making AI generated content, that's not really a strong argument for all of that.
If your AI is bad at its job and you're bad at even taking its job to use. And then presenting it for others to use. That's more than a single failure. At least in my eyes.
Almost all Google Maps and other related Google libraries tags are now following the same naming convention, for example google-places-api, google-directions-api, google-geocoding-api etc.
I would therefore suggest to rename the googleplacesautocomplete tag to google-places-autocomplete.
@RyanM Give users with 10k+ rep the ability to launch somebody into the moon. It's like a delvote. But for a user. And doesn't really "delete" them, just moves them.
More seriously, I'd love more tools to deal with bad answers. A downvote is not enough. Delvotes might not even work if a bad contribution has two upvotes. Or 100.
However, I really don't know what FR I can do about it. I'm pretty sure it'd be met with a lot of resistance whatever it is.
"Are you afraid of spam? Well, I have a bunch of solutions for you: ... for the first month, no new user can post anything." oh honey the spammers learned that trick yeeeaaarrsss ago; they post from aged accounts all the time.
@RyanM I mean, knowable. There are rules for it. But you're not too far off. The #4 most frequent javascript question is How to access the correct this inside a callback. It's unknowable to many. More specifically, many expect this to act like other languages like Java where if you have sayHello() { return "Hello" + this.name } it's always going to be the instance which is referred to by this. In JS that's not necessarily the case.
> Introduce negative tags for better visibility. I.e. when question is about [python 2], red tag <s>[python 3]</s> can emphasize that it's not welcomed any more to discuss newer versions.
Actually, interesting idea about "negative tags". Never thought about it. I'm not sure it's a good idea but interesting nonetheless.
Realistically, there are two close reasons: "Close but can be edited" and "So off-topic that it can't be reopened unless everything about the question is changed".
Maybe a third one which is when you think should be closed but aren't sure if it's reopenable.
Even in the most extreme example, you might think a question is not about programming, but then they edit to clarify that they're actually trying to perform the operation programmatically.
> [...] you are not good enough to be as quick and confident with your judgements of rudeness and badness as you think you are, so your false negative rate on downvotes, [...] and so forth is too high. And even if by some chance you individually are not overshooting the mark, too many of the people on your side of this issue are.
<yoda>Too many, on your side of this issue, are</yoda>
I was confused what it is. False "negative" where the negativeness is downvoting? So it was "incorrect downvotes". Or was it actually something about the rate which made it negative. Perhaps, too many downvotes to upvotes ratio? Too little downvotes to upvotes ratio?
Because they're basically saying that you're not good enough [i.e., accurate enough] to be as quick and confident with your judgments [of the quality of the post, and thus with your votes] as you think you are.
So it's an accusation of someone lacking the necessary dexterity to move the cursor onto the right button? Or the necessary intelligence to map their assessment of quality into the decision to vote accordingly?
You fail to accurately assess the quality/accuracy of the post, and therefore you cast a downvote that is undeserved/inappropriate. You especially fail to accurately assess the quality/accuracy of the post when you do so very quickly.
@E_net4theidiotdownvoter It doesn't require reading minds. Although it does require adopting/imposing some objective criteria for when a post should be voted up or down.
@NewPosts So, I tried to check azure-boards and try to clean up what I can now. However, it went from 293 questions there yesterday to 14 when I checked it now. Not sure at which point the cleanup happened, but seems good now. Thanks in backwards to whoever was involved.
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I'm pretty sure uMatrix blocks it on my other machine. I'll be able to confirm soon when I transfer over to it. On this one I only have uBlock origin and it doesn't. At least not with the basic filter lists it has.
> Does anyone can help me please by explaining step by step how to use this SSO PHP Package in my both application (Laravel & Yii) to create a Single Sign-One ???
My StackOverflow quesiton was closed with the following message
I chose the second option "post a new one" and invested serious time and effort to improve the clarity of my question with more details. I deleted my former question so it would not be regarded as a duplicate. My improved question ...
@AndrewT. FFS, I hate these questions. I should edit to drop the "fixed" part, then repost it as an answer. But it also seems like it's closable anyway. Overall - a mess.
But I'm not very bendy. Maybe I should do some yoga or something. What is the preferred physical exercise for the AI overlords? So we maintain maximum bendiness.
At best one can claim it's been stagnant, given traffic stats have hovered around the same for 5 years
> It’s an important moment for our customers, too. AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud (in addition to our other Collectives clients) can now meet their customers where they already are and build a trusted, bilateral connection through which to share accurate, cutting-edge information and updates. That includes announcing new releases, offering direct customer support, endorsing answers to user questions, and reviewing product feedback from the community.
they were already "meeting their customers" here prior to collectives with the same low quality content
> “Everything moves so fast and the source of truth changes often and things that are old can just be actively bad to learn.”
so instead of doing something about it they think adding udemy/pluralsight ads is the solution
that blog to me more or less reads as an eventual obituary. All of the seeming problems the SO community has, outside of the staging ground that is destined to fail, are being solved by pushing people away from SO rather than giving us the tools to do anything about it
It was a busy and successful quarter, so although my first update of 2023 takes place in a fundamentally different environment than my first of 2022, my optimism for the future has not changed. It’s simply joined by a dose of pragmatism.
I'm trying to do an information if a staff member is currently online or not. I send a query to the server if the user has a moderation rank. Since I need to check it every 60 seconds or so, I put the code in App.tsx. However, every time I query the server, it refreshes the entire DOM. I could us...