@OlegValteriswithUkraine I think one can fairly have both motives: one can think that accepting answers is useful, and that therefore, encouraging others to accept yours when they have stated that they're correct, rather than waiting for someone else to do it for you, is indeed useful for the site.
@RyanM correct, and those (provided they exist) should abstain from doing that as it is impossible for an outside observer to infer which motive is in play (any party will claim it does it for the greater good)
My proposal also has the convenient advantage that if the system improves to inform people that "thanks, this worked" is not a useful comment, then permissible comments requesting acceptance will substantially decrease as well.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Well, one could argue that about virtually anything that could benefit both the user and the site. Maybe I'm only posting answers because I want more rep, rather than because I care about helping people. How can you tell?
That said, I'm not totally opposed to the idea of the CoI requirement, and I would prefer it to a total ban. I just don't think it's important given the situations that I would allow the comments in.
Well, you surely do skew voting in your favor. If you don't post a better answer, people might vote for the other one.
Posting an answer is at least implicitly suggesting that you'd like it to be upvoted and/or accepted.
@RyanM I think it will be important - by disallowing that outright, you close the windpipe on complaints that "I posted 4000 comments on my posts and acted according to the rule". Let's make rules less easier to abuse rather than harder by keeping loopholes
...anyway, I feel I've gone too far down that rabbit hole of a reductio ad absurdum. I think what I'm trying to say is that when selfish motives result in people doing helpful things for the site, that's a good thing.
sure, and I am just saying that I'd like it accompanied with airtight rules with no wiggle room :) Which is the same as what I said above: "I'd go with your proposal + conflict of interest"
I also, as a moderator, would prefer that I not have to adjudicate potentially complex conflict-of-interest cases. For example, what if you post it on a question where a coworker has an answer?
that's not part of the rule - only direct conflict of interest counts. We are not in position to check if someone posted on their friend's question, or coworker, or a family member, etc. Such a relationship is outside the scope of SO.
Frankly, I'm surprised this was posted on Meta as a "proposal". Wouldn't it have made more sense to just post it as a "rule", and take it from there? Now that it's a proposal, what happens if the question ends up with a negative score? I'm optimistic that won't happen, but what if the top voted answer is against it being a rule, and has a much higher score than the question, which now seems quite likely? Will mods still enforce the rule? I don't see how that's going to work.
Of course, mods can still enforce the rule regardless of meta's opinion, but that would make the "proposal" not really a proposal, and that's not good at all.
@RyanM Meh. It's still way too much overhead. And random sampling is not a good way to moderate.
We just don't need more noise.
Hell, people are justifying this by saying that it's OK to leave noisy comments containing Help Center links telling people how to improve their questions. Well, it may shock everyone to learn that I also dislike those comments!
Cast a close vote and/or a downvote. Do so silently, with no need to leave noisy comments.
If nobody else agrees with you, then nothing else comes of it. If enough people do, then stuff happens at a system level. Perfect.
@cigien Oh, I see the confusion. You see, what is meant is that, between us, we have the intelligence of approximately one individual. We all share the same mind, just different pieces of it. :-)
In fact, I'd almost go the other way than saying a link to the Help Center justifies a comment: if you're leaving a comment that amounts to little more than a link to the Help Center, you shouldn't be leaving that comment at all.
I think that an explanation of how to improve that specific question is useful, though. Far more so than a downvote that explains nothing, or a close vote that the author won't see until days later, if ever.
If the close reason adequately explains how to improve the question, then no further comment is needed. The fact that the close reason's explanation doesn't show up until others agree that it actually applies is a feature, not a limitation.
Downvotes aren't meant to explain anything; common misconception.
Downvotes are meant to signal that someone thought the question was unclear or not interesting, and thus signal to future viewers that they may avoid wasting their time looking at that post.
If you do not find the opinions of others to be relevant to your own preferences, then you are free to ignore them.
Telling people who are currently misusing comments to stop posting the noisy comments and just use the accept button 1) reduces future comment noise and 2) improves the scoring of the answers on that question.
@CodyGray let's make it post the "thanks, this worked!" comment, then ask to upvote, then upvote, then proceed to suspend itself once it comments on every post. This way the problem can be dealt efficiently by FGITW'ing all the commenters.
Sure. Why wouldn't that work? People are exactly as likely to listen to that as any other piece of advice. Heck, following this piece of advice gives you 2 rep!
I have asked a question here and realised that there are 8 upvotes and 4 downvotes. Very weird because, a question being liked by 8 ppl but also being disliked by 4 people? How it that possible?
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Ah, that's... not going to be possible. The two options are: one complaining about "targeting" because they got 4 downvotes, with a "PS: Pls don't downvote it", and another feature-requesting a pop-up notification in the achievements menu for reputation loss.
In fairness, the "targeting" post does look like serial voting but oh my god the reputation page is so hard to read now that I can't tell if it actually got reversed or what happened.
> Can we limit the stack overflow user or question deletion reputation loss?
> Now, yesterday, I lost about 17 reputation(very valuable to me) because of a question deletion. This is a loss for me. I understand that we will lose it if it does not exist. But, is it not a loss?
Yeah. I could get behind that being downvoted a few more times.
That is to say: I wouldn't see it as a loss.
@RyanM You must be looking at the wrong page. Try this one; it's fairly easy to see that it was reversed.
Interesting to note that the CM who investigated wasn't really even convinced it was targeted downvoting.
I switched over to my Ubuntu dev box to do some actual work, after finishing with emails, and I was frustrated to see (A) another day, yet another irritating "Software Update" pop-up in front of the work I am actually trying to do (sometimes it even steals keyboard input!), and (B) that the machine had hard crashed, something that the "Software Update" pop-up seems to bring about frequently, but probably only a spurious correlation, as both tend to happen after the machine sits for a while.
Yeah. Well, on the upside, I just discovered in the settings where I can change the frequency of notifications to be "Weekly", as opposed to what was previously set "Daily", which I assume is the default.
Weekly would be a bit more like Windows's Patch Tuesday.
@CodyGray huh, yeah, there's always a setting somewhere... which is still a bit annoying. I am not sure I'd survive daily updates for long - I wonder what's the reasoning for this to be the default
@VLAZ A qualified yes. NT 4 is better because it's more stable than 95.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Lazy, ineffective developers constantly breaking things, and so wanting users to rapidly install updates to hide their incompetence.
I'm preparing for taking an Oracle exam, but I don't know do I have to subscribe to take the test.
I read the info from this page:
https://education.oracle.com/oracle-database-sql/pexam_1Z0-071
Please give me some advice, thanks
The high contrast dark mode is awesome, I use it as my main theme for Stack Overflow. However, the underlines used for every link are annoying. It would be awesome if we could have a tweaked version of the high contrast mode as an "AMOLED" dark mode, because the black background is so much better...
Somehow, it's even worse that they did it imperiously, without realizing that the user couldn't even accept the answer at the time of reading the comment.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine that one crosses the line, even for me. However, I can't necessarily blame them for forgetting what they wrote literally a decade ago.
and why am I not surprised that while going through the list I see a "slight" correlation between the commenter leaving the comments and being the answerer
Well, sure it is. They already explained how. Maybe you missed it? I'll try to summarize.
By bullying people into accepting answers, they get more of their answers accepted, and that gets them more reputation points, which makes them more motivated to contribute, which means they'll post more answers, which gets more questions answered, which makes the site better.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine also banned under my proposed regime
Also would ban:
That does not entitle you to downvote. His answer was correct for the question you asked. — Tim Roberts13 hours ago
the best part? It wasn't them.
@wickedpanda. I didn't downvote you on purpose, maybe accidentally clicked that?But I click the upper arrow and try to make it "1", I can only make it to 0, not 1. Sorry for the misunderstanding again. — Weixu Pan13 hours ago