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01:28
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Q: What happens when the same user asks the same question twice?

Lightning McQueen I have a question about my Stack Overflow post: Why is my data not being stored to my firebase realtime database? So as a new user, I've posted an answer to this question, and later (a few minutes after) I found that the same user who asked the first question has asked another question and tha...

 
4 hours later…
05:19
@NewPosts hammertime!
 
3 hours later…
08:34
> Like what questions? This very one? /s
That was some quick handling.
Have the reputation thresholds always been the same?
in particular, for upvote and downvote privileges?
If they were different, it would have been mostly during the bootstrapping phase. They've been like this for a very long time.
So it's either that, or they lost the necessary reputation to downvote after the fact. Should be relatively easy with bounties.
ah, I didn't consider bounties
topping that list, however, is someone without any undeleted questions or answers
(and an account less than 5 years old)
so, what, people make dozens of accepted edits, downvote a few things, offer ~150 rep worth of bounties and then give up on the site without ever asking anything?
I guess it really takes all kinds.
08:48
@KarlKnechtel That user has some very odd reputation changes though...
Might be a merged account.
@E_net4isonstrike What is a strike, anyway?
For example, they lost 110 rep one day, but when you expand you get "There were no net reputation changes on this day"
oh, that could be part of it
@KarlKnechtel Yes. You can find confirmation that the thresholds were the same as they are now as far back as 2010. And if you trust my memory, they've been that way forever.
One user's profile actually looks borked; they have 11 reputation, have never given a bounty out, and have an answer with a score of 50
08:52
... huh. on a different stack site, I somehow managed to get "serial voting was reversed" - after my first post there
And the profile graph shows them having almost 700 reputation.
...you can check what bounties someone has given out?
@KarlKnechtel It's quite easy to lose reputation and thus lose privileges.
well, yes, but from 125 down to below 15 is impressive
I see.
08:53
@KarlKnechtel The user with 3 downvotes? They have two undeleted answers. Which user are you referring to?
@ThomA I wonder if there could at some point have been a bug with restoring reputation to suspended users after their suspension ended.
Maybe. Perhaps I should post it as a bug on MSO/MSE. /shrug
Link or user ID, please?
not sure why that didn't show up for you... ?
Oh wow. It totally didn't. The top user there had only 3 downvotes. No idea what happened...
Also, yeah, lots of deleted posts...
Thanks. Edited the onebox out of that.
08:55
👍
That's not a bug. That's moderator-assisted cleanup of vote shenanigans.
I guess there's a lot of weird stuff to find if you dig like this.
Actually, since I said that, I'm deleting both of those user profile links.
:56470269 stackoverflow.com/a/76142483/6296561 tells you about everything you need to know
@CodyGray-onstrike if you're talking about the "serial voting was reversed" thing, the reason I'm confused is because I don't see how it can be "serial" if there is only one target
08:57
I'm not talking about that. That's from automated detection and removal. What I'm talking about is sockpuppetry, where votes are manually removed.
Ahh, so for some reason the reputation changes aren't showing up, but the user has lost that rep. Interesting
@KarlKnechtel There isn't
The rep graph just struggles handling spam flags
The rep changes don't show up because these invalidations rewrite history.
Makes sense
08:58
Rep is recalculated automatically, from the beginning, based on the current state.
spam flags would come with a rep penalty yeah
Pretty sure rep graph funny business has been reported before
Probably.
Where's the funny part?
Oh, that's interesting... The rep graph is different for mods.
The total is -730, if that isn't shown to mortals
09:00
Where you see a -110 rep change event on Oct 28, 2019, mods see a -154 change on that same day.
Ah, that's because we see the rep effect from deleted posts, whereas normal users don't.
Well, that's not all it is.
Good thing I never look at rep graphs; this could be confusing! :-)
Good old meaningless internet points. :)
When can I trade them in for meaningless crypto currency.
StackCoins O.o
@ThomA Did you not get the email?
@ThomA StackCryptoLLMBlockchainAICoins:tm:*
09:03
I didn't, but I remember seeing that post.
@CodyGray-onstrike I get like no SE-related emails, and it's almost disappointing :p
I'm not sure your email address is easy enough to find.
It's not zoeisonstrike(at)hotmail.com..?
@CodyGray-onstrike I mean
It's publicly listed on my GH profile
09:10
I'll go update the spammer bot now. :)
I just looked at your GH profile and did not see it!
Should be in the sidebar
They might be hiding them from users that aren't logged in though
indeed they do xd
Yeah, once I signed in I could see it.
Sigh. Why does GitHub keep logging me out??
OK, never mind. I did not realize I'd been logged out of GH.
I have that issue too, Cody.
Though I don't often go onto the website itself; I tend to use other party tools.
09:23
I use the website relatively frequently. Most of what's up there is volunteer and side stuff, like SO/SE-related things, for which I don't have any tools installed because they're very different than the normal work that I do.
@CodyGray-onstrike git gud, scrub :p
okay, actually there is a strong trend for users who have cast more votes, to be more negative. But the median vote ratios stay really high.
@Zoeisonstrike git iz gud; github sux dawg
1
Q: How are we doing? Please help us improve AWS. Take our short survey

0stone0I just got a new banner on Stackoverflow: The survey starts with: Thank you for helping us understand your experience with AWS. Sharing your feedback about AWS will help them to make future improvements for you and fellow developers. In this short survey, we'll ask for your input surrounding sa...

I'd like to apologize in advance for what I'm about to do :p
@CodyGray-onstrike OMG, like, GitHub is legit amaze! It's, like, the bomb dot com for all things code and stuff. But, let's be real, if you're not flexing your mad skills on there, you might as well be living in the dark ages, fam. No cap, you gotta level up your game if you wanna be on our level. But hey, don't stress, you got this! Just gotta hustle and grind, and soon you'll be slaying the GitHub game like a boss. Keep it lit, my dude! 💪✨
09:31
That was so cringe >_<
blame ChatGPT :p
My prompt was
Write this message in a stereotypical gen-Z way:

GitHub is great, you just have no skills
@KarlKnechtel "The more you vote, the more electrons you build up"
@CodyGray-onstrike A miserable pile of Discord secrets.
Can confirm; there's certainly a lot of misery.
09:59
The query I really wanted was harder to build than I hoped. Finally got there: data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/1766100/…
@KarlKnechtel well done!
Pity no badges, or rep, on SEDE. ;)
10:15
It bugs me there's no Votes column in the Users table...
@Zoeisonstrike I guess that's why I don't get along with Gen-Z...
What happens if you ask it to write like a stereotypical gen-Alphaer?
10:35
@CodyGray-onstrike OMG, like, GitHub is soooo cool, you know? It's, like, this super awesome platform where you can, like, show off all your coding stuff and collaborate with others. But, hey, if you don't have the skills, it's like, totally fine! You can, like, learn and grow and become a coding genius. Just keep at it, dude! Don't worry, you'll get there. Keep exploring and trying new things. You got this! #GitHub4Life #NoSkillsNoWorries
Wow, that's significantly less annoying. And way more than I'd expect from the average 9-year-old.
@AndrewT. I mean, I'm technically gen-Z
@CodyGray-onstrike The oldest gen-A people are 13 now
Feel old yet? :p
Oh, they are?
Depending on who you ask, as usual
But some sources say 2010-roughly 2025
@Zoeisonstrike oh...
As usual, I don't know what I'm looking at. :-)
leftmost dot = people with 1 or 2 (literally) total votes, filtered to users who can downvote. 96.5% of those are up. (Of course, there are tons of 15-125 rep users with a single upvote, too :) )
next is the bin for 3-4 total votes, then 5-9 - binned exponentially, with 3 bins per decade.
(I couldn't find an easy way to use nice pre-set numbers for the bin ranges.)
So... you don't get users casting more than 10% of their votes as downvotes until you get to... some number of rep
-- skip users with no votes, to avoid div by 0 FYI, @KarlKnechtel you could NULLIF your divisor: Dividend/NULLIF(Divisor,0) which avoids it, and the non-SARGable clause in the WHERE.
The dot labelled "10" (with around 90% up) shows people with a few thousand total votes (2155 up to 4641 inclusive, if I mathed right)
We need "help" from "elite" users with over 30k or so votes each, to drive the overall average below 90%.
(and then they only drive it to about 88%)
10:47
Thus effectively proving that the rep-loss from downvoting discourages many people from downvoting, at least until they get to 30k+ and are therefore virtually immune to privilege loss from downvoting.
30k is the user's vote count, not rep score
but you probably aren't wrong anyway
actually, let me compare
Ah, I see.
See, I need textual descriptions of all plots.
11:00
data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/1766130/… Okay. There is a steady trend towards more negative votes as reputation increases (I think this one is simpler to understand!) but with a curious dip for users with 30000-30999 reputation
but past 50k or so there's a lot of noise and no upward or downward trend. It just stabilizes at an overall ratio of about 60% up.
Which, interestingly IIRC matches the ratio we get from "anonymous feedback"
11:49
Data is noisy past 250k or so due to low sample size I guess
but as users get more experienced, their upvote percentage trends down towards somewhere in the high 50s
I doubt it has anything to do with fearing the rep penalty, though.
... On the other hand: users at, say, 35k rep have presumably cast the large majority of their votes before reaching 30k (to pull numbers out of a hat)
12:20
Maybe to complicate this - it's probably not all rep-based. Higher curation activity is probably more of a factor for downvotes.
There is some correlation to higher rep and more curation. But it's not necessarily always true.
12:58
0
Q: Many communities in my community navigator and HNQ sidebar entry have the wrong icon

NzallSee below image. Super user, Information Security, Worldbuilding and Writing have the wrong icon. I think Stack Overflow has the wrong icon as well. This also only happens on Stack Overflow. As far as I can tell when checking on a stackexchange.com site the icons are correct.

Just if you need the assurance, "your right" indeed.
@VLAZ-onstrike- your right hand?
@E_net4isonstrike No I don't think your right. It's abnormal. But whatever, it explains why the community is so problematic. The profiles are public. You can show mine, if you want. And these users are cause of problems. Without those as example, how would you believe me that such behaviors exist? — Marc Le Bihan 2 mins ago
Would probably blow the guy's mind if you told them that there is no proof those users downvoted Go questions.
Meh, upon reflection - probably would just be dismissed as "community is problematic" again.
I think this user is becoming a bit problematic.
13:14
Just now?
> "You don't even know Go" and the problem of its community? Take the time to study it First. You are not called answer to every question, you know. Your advice isn't required for everything. If you even don't know, please don't respond.
Meanwhile, some people go toxic because they don't get an answer within the day.
> Here, a vast majority of Go questions are receiving downvotes and we have a least two strong downvoters.
Correlation does not imply: a) causation b) hamsters c) pizza
OK, chances are those users did downvote Go posts but...so what. Still - the user is probably not going to be receptive to that, either.
I might get pizza today....
Or Chinese.
That's not at all downvote related but still.
I've probably downvoted some Go posts. Also, I've eaten pizza. Coincidence?
@CodyGray-onstrike Clearly downvoting causes pizza.
I think peperoni pizza does that, yes.
@VLAZ-onstrike- friday is pizza day :p
Hm, I don't much care for pepperoni.
Too greasy.
13:33
... Hmm. I should probably separate my analyses by question/answer votes.
My thesis is that in a well working system, answer votes would probably remain around that 60% up level, but question votes would indeed be very positive - because questions would have to be pre-vetted, and not be eligible for voting until they were approved. i.e. nothing should make it through that has really compelling reasons to downvote it.
Talking about pizza...
8
Q: Why is pizza soggy after microwaving?

HishamCompared to when heated over fire, pizza is soggy when heated in a microwave oven. I want to know why this is. So far I’ve just learnt that microwaves in ovens are of a specific frequency of microwave that transfer energy to water molecules exclusively, which then heat up and allow heat energy t...

Oh boy, I was expecting that to be in Seasoned Advice SE, but it's in Physics SE.
Welp, the answer was quoted from Seasoned Advice.
Still, good to know why, and that a mitigation strategy is to lower the MW power.
@KarlKnechtel Counter-proposal: answers shouldn't be voted on because that heavily biases "old" answers to higher score than more recent answers. And you can't really avoid that, either. Even very complex decay formulas would not yield a correct ordering. Instead all answerers should be editing a single body of an article. You can throw in a table of content to link to different sections. Because the entire thing should be useful. And not have a dozen copies of the same answer, either.
13:39
... you know, it's kinda amazing to me how profoundly Perl died out as a language in common use. Especially considering that this didn't also happen to PHP.
@KarlKnechtel Lower bar of entry for PHP. And high popularity because of the lower bar of entry.
@VLAZ-onstrike- oh, I didn't show you my 4-ring design concept for a Stack replacement
You can have somebody who only builds stuff in PHP 5.1 for the last 15 years.
@KarlKnechtel No, but I'm becoming more and more convinced that individual answers are a design flaw. It doesn't promote cohesion.
Also, even bad code can be a useful knowledge. But has to be presented properly.
ah well, sometimes there really are radically different ways To Do It
and more to say about even a simple question, than makes sense to discuss in a single answer
SO is too far in the other direction, agreed, but still
A language's bar of entry is an interesting metric. That might justify the substantial use of Python.
13:42
for example, if the standard way to solve a problem is with a library function, I kinda want non-standard approaches to be separate answers
and to be able to have a few answers with tags to indicate conditions like "when X isn't available", "when runtime is critical" etc
There is a real issue with people tossing their hat into a Q&A for older questions. Four pages of answers and they won't really read it, they just post another one. That repeats something from a decade ago. Or they do know the technique they show has been mentioned but add a little twist. Like different way to do string concatenation or whatever.
... does Perl really have a high bar of entry?
@KarlKnechtel Surprising, right? Considering that anything you write onto a notepad would be valid Perl.
13:44
@KarlKnechtel Higher than PHP, I think. I don't know Perl, I want to say. But I do know PHP. And I was hired as a PHP dev with zero PHP experience.
At the time, at least I knew Java. But I also know people with almost no programming experience are hired as PHP devs, too.
I drink to forget Java.
(water. I drink water)
> Frankly, as this answer is "shaming" or "calling out" users with direct links to their profiles, I see no other course of action than to flag this as abusive.
I was only a matter of time.
@E_net4isonstrike or... edit out the names/links?
@ShadowWizardStrikesBack Not really much of an improvement. The answer then turns into "Some people are bad and evil and downvote".
Still not an actual answer to the question. Just a slightly vaguer rant.
14:02
> Because I've warned the downvoters already
Uh, what?
If this guy has been around barking at the two Go participants, then this is an even greater issue.
Harassment.
@VLAZ-onstrike- true. :/
Well, sucks to be on strike right now, but the answer on Meta might be enough to report the problem.
oh, wow. bake a popcorn
14:10
reporting popcorn as abusive
@AndrewT. A single one?
> It makes me fat!
@VLAZ-onstrike- yeah, unfortunately :(
> They were in and replied. I hope they will change now.
Wow, what a superpower...
Can't find the comment where they did that though. Could it have been deleted?
in Meta Stack Overflow Comment Archive, 3 mins ago, by Boson - StandWithUkraine
@ThomA I opened first a question like this one in SO yesterday. They were in and replied. I hope they will change now. — Marc Le Bihan 58 secs ago
Yeah, I don't see it even on their network activity.
There is a question asked yesterday indeed, but no meta-commentary on votes.
There's a complaint about downvotes on a spring-boot question, Jun 12.
Yeah, that's the only interaction I see. It is with one of the named users (Volker).
I read the comments on the Maven Central question instead...
 
1 hour later…
15:34
 
3 hours later…
18:46
0
Q: I made a bad edit to a question and need it rolled back

UpAndAdamI incorrectly edited this answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/76573586/1410669 i thought i was doing the right thing but its wrong for me to correct all the technical errors on this post. I should have just flagged it commented and downvoted it, but i dont see the rollback even though my rep is ...

 
3 hours later…
21:16
0
Q: My daily voting was suspended at 37 votes instead of 40

DougI was headed to 40 votes when I was suddenly stopped at 37. Perhaps due to some votes that turned negative counts to 0 for some question posters? Is that a documented issue?

quite convenient how users are introduced to the fact that a voting badge exists before downvoting is possible

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