@Zoe A public, explicit exception to the standard suspension progression was blanket-granted by the company for AIGC in 2022-12. Moderators on SO generally didn't really like that exception, with the prevailing thought being that 30 days was too much in nearly all cases. Later, the company didn't like that moderators were actually suspending users for AIGC. That exception was withdrawn.
2
One thing that should be kept in mind regarding AIGC suspensions is that following the standard progression for AIGC was one of the things that was agreed upon in negotiations around the moderator strike, so there's extra emphasis placed on following the progression in AIGC cases.
I came across this suggested edit, here is a screenshot:
The edit simply update the link from specific version, to the "current" version. The old link is already working.
As the new link could broke because of software update, or be in conflict with the answer, should this type of edit be accept...
> Go ahead. Be my guest. Since telepathy is practised by those with >10K rep, I'm sure you'll be able to state what I mean as you think it needs to be stated
I mean the request for clarifications was very much because we don't know telepathy :P
My toxic trait is apparently suggesting that people post their personal axe to grind as a new meta question instead of posting it as comments on unrelated posts.
Ugh, so there is the solid tag. And if I'm writing about it, you might guess it's not about solid-principles - that's a separate tag. But it's also not solid-js which is, again, a different thing entirely.
@AbdulAzizBarkat Yeah, I rather dislike questions that appear to be designed to elicit a predetermined "correct" answer. I always feel like it's the sort of thing that will be brought up later in support of an argument that the answerer would not have intended to support
such as, y'know, "look, meta says you shouldn't answer questions with no question in them! this post has no question marks, so that's rep farming!"
one of my last answers was downvoted despite being a a better solution than the previous given ones without any comment.
IMHO if you vote down anything you should be required to give at least a reason because without that downvoting does not improve the information or as in my case might even lea...
@RyanM Honestly, as somebody who follows a post on downvote (yes, I know - I've said it before...) I don't think I'd be up for some sort of "ping" to downvoters to re-review a post. This can get noisy and confusing. I occasionally get a notification about a post I've done something with, say, two years ago. It might get an edit or a comment.
And since it comes out of the blue for me, I'd sit there and have to figure out why exactly is it followed, and should I do something based on the new activity.
Especially a downvoted older answer that gets an edit - I have to re-familiarise myself with the context and then re-evaluate why I thought the answer deserved a downvote, then finally can I evaluate if an edit merits changing my vote. This is inconvenient because I can't easily just delay it for later when I have the proper time and mindset for it. Leaving the notification unread is not the best.
Well, a reasonable implementation would address "I'd sit there and have to figure out why exactly is it followed", I think, because it'd indicate why you were being notified. Also, it would be reasonable to put some sort of cap on how long ago it will notify voters from; if it was two years ago, yeah, maybe you should have edited it sooner.
If you could manage notifications (more like "ToDos") better that would help. But also would help if it was my choice to go review old posts. If I could, say, press a button and get all posts that I have voted on and they have received updates since my vote. I can review them at my leisure. Presumably,I can also tick them off so they don't show up again until they get another update.
Yes, I recognise that would mean a lot of users simply won't engage with this I don't think the ping on update system is sustainable long-term. Seems it would likely turn people off. Saying as somebody who got 20+ notification from that Meta topic alone.
Speaking from experience from the staging ground, initially reviewers automatically followed the SG post once they reviewed. This resulted in getting a bunch of notifications about the SG post which got quite annoying resulting in the auto follow being turned off. I might get behind a single one-time notification for downvotes though.
I don't know how many times this notification would actually be useful though, people frequently fail to improve their posts even after comments with specific things they need to fix are left.
But even one-time notifications have problems. Users often would just send out one of these even if nothing was fixed. See reopen requests. They might also first sent out the "review your vote" notification and then actually properly update their post. But only after they've wasted their one-off notification. This happens often - a user updates a post one or more times but mostly cosmetically then finally gets it and addresses the core issue.
Also, let's put these aside for a moment - as soon as the feature is rolled out, there would be a wave of users trying to notify users about their downvotes on a lot of old posts. Which would also be very noisy.
Somebody went through the effort of describing three different technologies for the tag [cobra].
The excerpt reads:
Three possible technologies:
The Cobra toolkit is a pure Java HTML parser and rendering engine with support for CSS 2 and JavaScript.
The Cobra Programming Language has Python-like...
OK, this is one of those annoying things where the annoyance is mostly because it's baffling not really "infuriating*. A question was posted which seems unclear. Well, at least four users posted comments to this effect. One doesn't have CV privileges the other three have five digit rep. There is a single CV for not enough debugging details.
That CV is mine. As is one of the comments.
> Please see: idownvotedbecau.se/itsnotworking
^ one of the other comments. The post also has zero votes on it. Other than my close vote.
I am wondering if digging up old questions (some asked even years ago) is useful.
SO does so by granting badges and bots digging up old questions.
Since Programming languages and tech age quickly, are old questions useful to the audience of the present?
OK, I was looking at the question as I was writing in chat. Maybe the socket for updates broke or something. After I wrote in chat, I had a notification for a new comment and refreshing the page did show me the score was now -1
I have been learning to program via Harvard's free CS50 course. In problem set 2, I have to make a program that gets a string of text from the user, then determines the reading level of that text via the Coleman-Liau index. After I'm finished coding the program, I use check50, which sends a varie...
@VLAZ Looks like that's only for Stack Overflow for teams, specifically the enterprise edition at an added cost. I don't really mind if they go about it that way. Makes much more sense financially as well.
@TylerH Saying that is a bit disingenuous, given that the acquisition was announced on 2021-06-02, about a year and a half prior to the release of ChatGPT. It's unclear if the push for genAI is from Prosus or something which SO's CEO came up with as a way to try to make money, or at least try to keep Prosus happy about SO's potential future financial performance. All we really know is that the CEO has pushed it and there have been statements that there's some synergistic genAI work in other areas of Prosus. Overall, at least publicly (I have no non-public info), genAI has really been pushed by the CEO, without it being said that it's a mandate from Prosus, as far as I'm aware.
Sure, since ChatGPT took off, that's fine. I'm yelling into the void so figured accuracy WRT to when they jumped ship on SO's riaison d'etre was not particularly needed
If you follow something a day after it's posted, then 90+% of the time, you won't get notifications.
But there is also Metas. If you try to follow a suitably "exciting" topic you'd get a swarm of notifications for comments. Even if you only want to see new answers.
I think it is very unfair to downvote and ruin this Staff’s reputation; I am not happy about this myself but that doesn’t mean I’m gonna downvote. This should have been a com wiki but too late now. :D Also Damn AI those dirty contraptions- Be gone!!! — security_paranoid5 hours ago
I think I have too little participation on SO that I almost never receive A/B testing anymore... or even realized if there's A/B testing in the first place...
TL;DR
Would it be possible to make users of the Ask Question Wizard more aware that only their text will be part of the question, without the prompts?
Details
In recent months, I have noticed a number of questions where the asker is using the Ask Wizard as if the questions in the wizard were goin...
On May 6, @Rosie announced that SE is partnership with OpenAI.
In the previous announcement doesn’t mention is partnership with all SE networks, or just SO.
But today, I’ve seen this in Stack Overflow.
And for the YouTube, I’ve seen this video share about introduction of OpenAI.
So, I have somet...
I asked a question (Which branch to checkout when working on PRs for a forked repo?) and it was promptly closed as "opinion-based"
Where is the opinion-based part? Is this where I added some "I think"? (which were intended to show that I do not know if my approach is correct).
@VLAZ I hate that when I follow a question for comments, I don't also get notified for comments to the answers; I have to explicitly follow each one of those, too. For a hot MSO/MSE post, that gets messy.
Although not really a problem these days. Don't really think I've followed anything in at least half a year.
@KevinB I think you can access information on the main site via the feature, maybe they mean that. I don't really think adding it to the main site is financially sound for SO (I won't say they won't do it since they have a habit of breaking user trust...)
@KevinB Talking about this part of the video where they can set the search to look at other sources as well (one of them being Stack Overflow). youtu.be/v24kAOgd2gY?t=33
Well, the thing is they don't need to enforce it. They met the requirements on their end, whatever OpenAI / Google does SO's not going to take responsibility
I understand that there are a lot of questions about our partnership with OpenAI and what this means in terms of attribution. While I can’t answer every bullet point or all of the questions on the main Meta Post announcement, I want to be clear about our attribution agreement with any Overflow AP...
@AbdulAzizBarkat You're right that they don't need to - but their stance so far as been pushing "ethical AI" and "attribution is not optional". One would expect them to when that's their stance, even if it isn't legally or otherwise required. It's disappointing, but absolutely expected that those statements were completely meaningless
@RyanM The thing is this post doesn't say anything explicit like: "As part of the agreement we require our partners to provide sufficient attribution as per the post's license"
That's very different from requiring them to provide attribution of some form. They just said "The data we share is under this license". OpenAI can very well play the fair use card even with this agreement.
You can get like 1000000 questions per day with the API (using pagesize = 100, possibly less because some calls are more expensive, but the max reduction is still down to 333k posts per day)
SO alone is getting around 6000 posts per day, so you could probably get through most of the large sites on a single API key and still have quota to spare, but that requires strategic calls to the API
If I had to set up a system like that, I would get all posts from yesterday. I strongly doubt they need minute resolution, and that would let them use the date range filters to minimise wasted quota from pages that aren't full of new content
Could probably grab all the posts in the entire network on a single standard key with that approach. Just 60-180 quota would be spent on SO (on average), and the dropoff between SO and the second biggest site is significant
And IIRC, charcoal is operating on 20k (unless that was upgraded again, but I don't remember), and they do near real-time checks. But I imagine that might be undesirable for use in training data, because edits
Correction then; they were operating on 20k for a long time
If going by the same strategy as them, it wouldn't be impossible to set up a system that tries to fill a page before making a request. That would be close to real-time while still stuffing the pages to reduce quota use
@NewPosts I'm having a hard time objectively seeing this as an opinion based question
if the user's goal is X, there's an obvious correct place to branch at, no?
for example, if you wanted your secondary work to only be implemented if your existing branch work gets merged, then you branch off that. If you want it to be merged independently of your current work, then it should be branched off of origin or an existing dev branch, depending again on your goals.
i'd consider it a pretty terrible question generally though, even if it isn't opinion based.
it's like "decipher this requirements graph for me and tell me where i'm at in the graph"
@super-starball-ultra Low down on this page users are encouraged to attend-to niceties of written communication. This will improve legibility and comprehension. Please repost your comment using correct capitalisation. Thank you for your attention to detail. — Fe2O31 min ago
@KevinB @super-starball-ultra I have used .s-navigation { display: none !important } to block everything between the logo and the search bar for ~2 years now
it works farily well
wait, no, I take it back. I was looking at the outcome, but the actual selector is header.s-topbar > div > a + ol:first-of-type
now it seems there's only one ol so I can probably remove the first-of-type
grepping through the page code it looks like nothing else uses .s-navigation so that's probably safe after all
@TylerH I go with .s-topbar--container > .s-navigation
@TylerH $$(".s-navigation") for chrome devtools
@KevinB lmao. I only make a practice of lowercase in comments and chat. it just feels more comfy to type and in my mind is supposed to have some kind of opposite effect of all-caps.
Comments aren't meant as long-term content, nor can they be edited by anyone but OP for 5 minutes (or mods forever, but dumping copyediting comments on mods is just a waste of time)
Let's say, theoretically of course ;), that I ask an utterly horrible question (or I ask an entirely valid question on meta, but people just don't like it. Either scenario works). So horrible, in fact, that SO subsequently bans me from asking questions because I now have a bad question contributi...
@super-starball-ultra I have reached that point with that discussion as well
@RyanM In your 1st comment to this answer you wrote: "... will increase my reputation by getting more people to upvote my answers because they helped them." Here is the "casting" Q&A answer central to my other recent SO-Meta post. Seven (7!!) users found that answer "helpful" within the first 48 hrs of its posting!! And, you will simply love the unicorn that is waiting to be yours when you reach 50K. — Fe2O32 hours ago
I have no idea what this is trying to say to me.
The only thing I am certain of is that it is not a definition of the term "rep farming"
also I spent far too long trying to figure out the meaning of the secret message "BARAYI" here:
@super-starball-ultra Bored awaiting a legible version of your comment, I performed a quick check. Amongst your slew of words is: "voting participation from SMEs". Running a quick search using terms [c] "allocate" "2D array" is:answer, amongst ~700 answers I found this 2017 answer to be, pretty much, what the questionable answerer has recently re-posted using their telepathic understanding of that question. Any SME casting a UV had to overlook DRY (where Your means SO itself.). It's an enigma! — Fe2O37 secs ago