@cigien there is a live mod that tracks the room, @ZoestandswithUkraine :) I also work on bringing SpotDetector back from the dead with reporting of potentially bad suggested reviews already finished and tested
besides, it's way more fun this way provided the handling mods don't mind, which they seem not to
plus it increases visibility of bad review patterns as reports allow handlers to cross-reference instead of individually handing flags
plus the reporter usually provides a source for plagiarism
as for keeping decorum around bad reviewers, I, frankly, do not understand why should we
It's not like bad reviewers are paraded on meta :) which would be crossing the line
It also serves for calling out bad judgement calls of reporters themselves
@RyanM depends on where ya'll start your day, I guess :)
and another besides, it's not like a plagiarism of a wiki report puts a black mark on the user. Many do it in good faith (or approve) without knowing the rule
* about fun - it's not reporting that's fun, it's that most of the time those edits come packaged with hilarious summaries or bodies :)
@OlegValteriswithUkraine My concern here is that it's public shaming of individual users for no particular reason that I can see. Of course, simply reporting a bad review is indirectly shaming, but take the latest report Nick posted above, and the resulting conversation between y'all. If I was that user, I would be, a little upset about that. I wouldn't mind so much if it was a conversation in a random chat room, but such conversations being sanctioned by site mods makes it worse IMO.
I do agree that these conversations are particularly bad on Meta, but they're not great in here either, and if more than a dozen users visited here, it might already have been an issue. Sorry for being a bummer, I can certainly see how it's nice to discuss these things with each other, and sure, some reviews can be hilarious :) But take SOCVR, which has pretty strict rules about fun that involves SO users not in the room, or even discussing users at all.
Of course, this is all a moot point if there's some concrete reason that reporting publicly is good, I just don't entirely see what that reason is, and why flags don't suffice.
I mean, I don't think either of y'all meant any malice whatsoever, but from the POV of the user you're discussing ... I'm not so sure. I'm assuming they're an active reviewer, and reviewing in good faith, and the conversation above comes across (IMO) as being more negative than necessary.
I agree with cigien in general here. Personally, and perhaps similarly, I'd prefer discussion about reviews be limited to the review action/content and not about the users involved.
it is limited, @HenryEcker, and I agree with that too - but it seems to be that the initial problem presented was with reporting, not the single instance of the discussion
to which I agree that it should be a rule here as pointed out. Not reporting? I am inclined to say no, it should not be a rule
@OlegValteriswithUkraine That was intentional on my part, sorry about that. It seems to me that the discussion of users as a result of reporting bad reviews was something that could be avoided entirely by not reporting things (that could be reported via a flag). My concern is really only the discussion of users, and I should have phrased it that way.
It felt like it would come across a bit strong if I just said "I don't think we should discuss users in here." Perhaps I overthought that, given the general agreement with the sentiment. Looks like y'all have plans already :)
I, in general, tend to really not like "it has potential for abuse/misuse/mishandle, therefore it should be scrapped" arguments, but very receptive of "it was not ok, let's handle it" :)
I think I'd personally suggest a similar-ish policy to SOCVR: focus on the review, not the user. Although it's a bit different, because the moderator handling it will inevitably try to find more bad reviews, so having more of them is helpful...that might be a case where a message could just say "additional reviews linked in a flag" or something
expected: rejected (no improvement, too minor, does not fix other issues - see edit) actual: rejected (1 approver, 1 rejector) link: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/31823039
> Edit summary: You Added Wrong Its .\gradlew singingReport For "Window" and gradlew SinginReport For "Linux"
@OlegValteriswithUkraine They're...not actually worth protecting. You can't distribute an app signed with a debug keystore on any reputable app store (at the very least, not on the Play Store), because that's never what you want.
expected: approved (the new link is actually the maintainer fork) actual: rejected (2 rejectors) link: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/31754118 [handled]
I understand we are not supposed to discuss users, so I'll try to keep it anonymous: there is, apparently, a crusader that took it upon themselves to fix all the instances of mentioning Flutter in titles. And nothing else. You have to admire the dedication
ok... the below is, apparently, plagiarism (one vote), but I can't find the source:
it doesn't generally happen in the queues, because the task is "checked out" to you for a bit when you receive it, so that way it doesn't get ninja'd out from under you.
I think there might be some thing where it counts reviews done very close together also in certain situations? not certain, though, don't quote me on that.
> The editor has indicated that this is a significant edit that improves and/or resolves problems with the closed question. Approving this edit may send it to the Reopen votes queue.
> The Foundry security model encompasses both authentication and authorization. Authentication verifies the identity of a user, while authorization grants access based on a user’s attributes and permissions.
> The Foundry security model encompasses both authentication and authorization. Authentication verifies the identity of a user, while authorization grants access based on a user’s attributes and permissions.
> The Foundry Security model encompasses both authentication and authorization for applications, components, and datasets within the Palantir Foundry platform.
seems like after seeing the full sentence copied I read the "The Foundry platform has security as a core development philosophy" as "Palantir Foundry was designed and built with platform security as a core principle". wow
^ no, really, why would anyone think "bluebird" refers to To Mock a Mockingbird??
> Edit summary: Trying to help 😅
> Edit summary: Your Answer wasn't clear enough for beginners and had some grammatical erros too, so I made changes so that it'll be easy for anybody to solve their more efficiently.
> Edit summary: the beginning does not help, and the question must be thickly marked and Images are now visible
@OlegValteriswithUkraine I don't see why you rejected it. It's useful to know what it doesn't refer to. In fact, we probably need more: it doesn't refer to blackbird (the bird), nor does it refer to the bird (rude gesture), nor does it refer to koalas (who are not birds), nor to the principality of Andorra (which is a country state).
@OlegValteriswithUkraine When I initially saw that one I thought it said "To Kill a Mockingbird" and was about to reject it outright before I read it properly, decided I didn't feel like researching that to see if it was reasonable, and then skipped :-p
@StephenOstermiller That doesn't make the edit okay
The amount it does copy remains significant, and fully unattributed
The first sentence is paraphrased. The rest of that paragraph is blatant copy-pasta. The bullet points are intermittent copies, with parts that are clearly just restructured sentences
And that is a weak argument in other cases, but not when it's clear the content was just ripped from another site, and partly changed to avoid 100% plagiarism
I'm not saying it was OK. I'm glad the plagiarism was caught. It just isn't obvious. I wanted to explain why I reviewed as OK. I even spot checked more than one phrase from it with Google searches to try to find plagiarism.
@RyanM I mean... surely the "To Mock a Mockingbird and Other Logic Puzzles: Including an Amazing Adventure in Combinatory Logic" is the first thing you.think about bluebird :) it was so funny to me as I am an SME, and a dominamt association with bluebird is promises before A+
@StephenOstermiller That's fair, I may have come off more brash than intended as I was in an irritable mood, intention was to say that I had no issues finding it, although I could understand why other users wouldn't pick up on it immediately