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00:43
i mean
there'd also be a lot more voters if they stopped pushing away new users
00:58
Now you're asking for a welcome wagon.
01:26
where can I find docs on whether/which moderator actions (Ex. close, reopen, delete, undelete, protect, etc.) cannot be undone by non-mod users?
@Machavity parasocial relationship?
01:43
@TylerH impossible.
 
1 hour later…
02:46
@starball Delete is the only special case. By which I mean it's a privilege non-mods have that can't be overturned by non-mods. Obviously, things like locks can't be undone by regular users, but regular users can't apply locks so it makes sense.
@Spring yo
@HenryEcker can a non-mod vote to delete something a mod undeleted?
@HenryEcker oh. I wonder why the asymmetry.
I think the initial rationale is that mods delete things that are problematic. Not letting users resurface problematic content on the site is a good thing.
Nowadays we have significantly more tools to handle things. Red-flag deletion workflows that lock the posts, as an example. Locking the post, naturally, prevents all votes.
02:58
@HenryEcker okay I can kinda see the logic.
I received a notification from StackOverflow. I see there is an election for a moderator, but I don't how to vote
@ElectionBot how do I vote?
@Spring If you have at least 150 reputation, go to the election page. In the right sidebar you can drag and drop the candidates in your preferred order. If you want to make an informed decision on who to vote for, you should read the candidates' answers to the questionnaire, look at examples of their participation on Meta, and how they conduct themselves.
@starball It's a bit of a poor system as well since the delete is only binding as long as the user is a moderator. When/if that user steps down from being a mod all of the posts they mod-deleted once again become undeletable by regular users. Though it does count as a trusted user deletion so it requires a consensus of 3 users to overturn.
 
3 hours later…
06:02
Special report: The election is currently ongoing, and 13,858 (1.46% of 949,275 eligible) users have already voted! I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
 
5 hours later…
11:24
how many voted?
@starball Based on the number of Constituent badges awarded, 14,034 (1.48% of 949,290 eligible) users have voted so far.
 
4 hours later…
15:50
@ElectionBot Which candidates will sacrifice the greater good in the name of tax cuts?
16:16
@ElectionBot how do I vote?
How to vote: In the election page's right sidebar, drag and drop the candidates into the "Drag next selection here" area in your preferred order. To make an informed decision on who to vote for, you should read the candidates' answers to the questionnaire, look at examples of their participation on Meta, and how they conduct themselves. Being able to vote requires at least 150 reputation.
3
 
1 hour later…
17:25
@AndreasmovedtoCodidact I think ElectionBot has simply started ignoring you and me :P
@NotTheDr01ds It means we're doing proper critical journalism. Be proud.
Honestly, ElectionBot's a bit wrong on the "How to Vote". If you simply "drag and drop the candidates in your preferred order", you don't vote. You have to drag and drop them into the "Drag next selection here" box, and it can be easy to miss that.
If, however, you simply click each candidate in the desired order, it does the expected thing.
testing 1, 2, 3.
@ElectionBot 4, 5, 6
@NotTheDr01ds I don't have the information you're looking for.
17:39
@ElectionBot 7, 8, 9
@AndreasmovedtoCodidact You want me to work, you pay me more.
@ElectionBot Ok, take this money I got from doing dishonest business.
@ElectionBot How many candidates voted for themselves?
@AndreasmovedtoCodidact Currently, there are 6 candidates: starball, NotTheDr01ds, janw, Dalija Prasnikar, CPlus, Stephen Ostermiller
@ElectionBot That's not what I asked for.
@AndreasmovedtoCodidact You might want to try asking a human about that.
17:57
@NotTheDr01ds At least when I try dragging and dropping the candidates, even within the non-voting list area, it puts them into the voting area when dropped. As such, while I agree the description could be improved, it appears sufficient. It may be reasonable to have the normal response provided changed to be more detailed. However, for the pinned response, it seems sufficient
@Makyen Interesting - Doesn't work for me :-/
It simply reorders the non-voting list area.
Checked on both Edge and Vivaldi.
The funny thing is that even when reordering candidates in the bottom, non-voting area, it resets the "Pending save in ..." so it looks like your action "took effect".
@NotTheDr01ds Looks like it does that in Chrome too. What I described above happens in Firefox.
@Makyen Ah, I don't regularly use Firefox, but I just tried and yeah, I see the same.
 
3 hours later…
21:08
Important notice from the electoral commission: The election is in full swing, and 14,451 (1.52% of 949,318 eligible) users have already voted! I can answer frequently-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
 
1 hour later…
22:34
@ElectionBot How many people have voted?
@Spevacus Based on the number of Constituent badges awarded, 14,490 (1.53% of 949,322 eligible) users have voted as of now.

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