@Scratte When you ask a question like this, please be explicit as to which flag you raised. With what you stated here, we have to guess. From your later statements, it sounds like you raised a VLQ flag. If you don't feel it's answerable and should be closed, why did you raise a VLQ flag instead of a close-flag?
@Makyen That looks like a minor system bug. Close flags show as "Disputed" when raised organically and the CV queue chooses not to close. But this case looks a bit more discombobulated.
@Scratte I believe it's declined from the CV queue if all responses are "Leave Open". It's helpful if the question is closed. If the response is other than that, the flag remains active until it ages away. (I think.)
@bad_coder np. It's definitely one I have bookmarked, as it's the most complete explanation I've seen, even if there are some nuances which are not included.
@IanCampbell You may want to try this in a room with more R experts, or contact the gold badge holder directly. It doesn't look like there's the expertise in this room to properly evaluate this question.
Does the second sentence have enough info for this to be an answer? stackoverflow.com/a/62506348/3744182I am having the same problem. Maybey it has something to do with youtube's quest to cull off all of the truth channels, and messages of those who often comment on them?
@dbc sigh The question has 460+ views. It went through First Posts with "No Action Needed". It's gotten not a single downvote or close-vote out of 458 views.
When I ran for mod, I had someone swamp my entry with lots of comments about how much I had downvoted. As in, I had "clearly downvoted too much" since I downvoted more than upvoted
It got deleted, but there was a strong contingent of commenters who believe downvotes should rarely, if ever, be used
Yeah, the error was a failure on my part at least a year ago when looking at the chat transcripts (& links). It's really clear when reading them now. I'm not sure how the error crept in. :;
Google Translate has no clue except what language it is.
user10957435
I've tried Google translate and it's not working for me.
user10957435
Yeah, it claims it's Vietnamese, but doesn't exactly tell me what it says. Though, apparently if I type [closed] after the title, it seems to suddenly like it.
Is this question reopen worthy? It seems maybe a bit broad to me but it's otherwise clearly defined and definitely not opinion based. It has 2 reopen votes already but I'm split on it.
@VLAZ personally I'm more in favour of delete (which it has 1 vote for as well) than reopen. "if they actually improved what it supports" Support for what? I think that's hopelessly broad
Also, There is a table called PostsWithDeleted. But it doesn't contain all deleted questions. Not sure what the deal is there - this is the most recent question in that table (sorted by CreationDate). Perhaps it has a delete vote against it?
@Scratte But the question I linked to which is deleted doesn't have a DeletionDate in SEDE. Although that's perhaps that might be updated more rarely - once a day or something.
Not so much on the SEDE front. Can the post be reopened yet still remain deleted? It would then look like the post was deleted but not closed - which is an impossible action (without moderator involvement).
And the delete will show as well. But you only have records in PostHistory for Posts that are NOT Deleted. Bit the posthistory is kept up to date while the post is deleted (that is why 10K-ers have a useful timeline on deleted posts) and once a post gets undeleted, all of the posthistory wil show up again.
@Vega It's a question about embedding tweets and the answer contains markup that seems to be from a tweet. However, as I said, I can't tell if it's supposed to be answering the question or not.
@Vega If it's not spam, it's certainly NAA as there is nothing in it that actually resembles an answer to the question. Amazingly someone has actually upvoted it...
Rules when it comes to armed conflict: 1. Don't start a land war in Asia. 2. Don't invade Russia in the winter. 3. Don't start a rollback war with rene.
@AdrianMole well, I looked at it and saw that an edit was overruled by the OP and on first sight that edit seemed to make it better but when I rolled back I was utterly disappointed. So given the spasm flag and the don't edit spam I decided to go back to 1st revision.
I found the tag bind which is super broad and imprecise. I found there is a burnination request for it as well. Is there any way I can help the request other than upvoting it?
Nothing wrong with folks asking duplicate questions (especially newcomers); I don't even think that should ever count against them in terms of Q-bans. Answering dupes is the problem.
... a brief comment outlining the issue, plus a link to the duplicate is what should be done. Even an upvote for the question, if it's nicely presented.
@oguzismail Those folks probably have most of their 500K from answering dupes: they're easy to answer! ;)
@AdrianMole yes. the reputation gain should be removed when a question is closed as a duplicate. Or answers to duplicate questions should be eligible for delete votes regardless of their score
@AdrianMole It's not my tag anyway. Think of it as a hypothetical situation. I don't care for the reputation of the poster. I just look at the post and if I find it's a good post even on a bad or duplicate Question, then I can't make myself to downvote it.
I also think that reputation should be awarded to the OP if they "Accept" the duplicate proposal (+2). And then disable the actual "Accept" button on any answers already there.
How did that question get 2 upvotes? It's a prime example of why I think downvotes should have the same penalty as the reward from upvotes. OP has +16 rep from what is in no way a good question.
That is one of those things that we just have to deal with ;) There's also the fact that if one had posted the same good post 10 years ago, it would probably have an insane amount of votes compared to it posted 2 months ago. But the post is the same, so the quality of the post is the same.
@Nick I think that is unfortunately very unlikely. Since the amount of posts is far greater now, so it's exposure will probably be much less in the next 10 years, than it would have had in the previous 10 years.
@Vega Yes, I noticed. I have noticed those things before, but I don't really have a lot of feelings about it. I see far more with no votes or all downs. It's kind of like a fluke. I also find the 7-word post that got 900+ upvotes sort of amusing. I could go insane out of jealously or in an attempt to construct another 7-word post, but I think it'll just make be bitter and grumpy and unfit to socialize :)
@Scratte I have seen a lot too ( who doesn't, haha ). At first I say: hmmm...., then: oh, well. I believe I almost never down voted if it is not for the actual quality
@Scratte Whenever I try to post a comprehensive answer it barely gets any upvotes. My most upvoted answer has a score larger than the next 10 highest scored posts of mine. And it's something and banged within about 5 minutes. I remember I checked very quickly for dupes, didn't a good one (at the time) and just wrote that.
Does anyone understand this edit? Looks to me like someone edited it and ask a different question. Maybe someone with two account providing more feedback to the question?
Yeah. Username and join dates are two days apart. Happens often enough - a new user makes an account then makes another by accident. Either they forget the password and just sign up again or log in using a different method or something.
I'm saying it's possible and I think fairly likely based on the language in the edit and the removed post. However, I'm not 100% sure. At any rate, it's too late - the edit was rejected.
Any idea how listen for downvotes on a page? Is it enough to attach a click handler to the downvote button (I'll need to check its state afterwards) or is there something better?
IMHO it depends on the volume of cases. Low amount of spammers: Sure thing, warn mods High amount of spammers: Do not warn mods, because in fact "comment evywhere" privilege should be reviewed
Obviously I got no analytics to give informed opinion, I am just a regular guy
@Dharman I'm OK with locking for too many comments. In fact, it might be good if there was an automatic lock functionality on getting too many comments. If there are 60+ comments received relatively short after posting, then either the question should be closed or people should be answering. Long discussions in comments are unscalable.
I'd much prefer -10 rep for getting a downvote to -0 rep for casting a downvote, for exactly revenge voting which is a larger problem than most people probably think.
@Dharman I don't think so, that's what the answers are for.
-10 rep for a downvote would mean that someone with +2/-3 would probably delete their answer
Not that it would ever happen. At best the company will add a new reaction to posts: sad smiley face :(
We need some sort of "super downvote". Not sure how to call it but there are popular answers with dozens, sometimes hundreds of upvotes and the answer are wrong. A single downvote or even ten will not even move the post from the top place in an answer. There was a suggestion for a "negative" bounty that might be a start for such a feature.
@VLAZ way too easy to abuse. The only way out from that would be to have "domain expert moderators" who can estimate technical problems in a given field.
exception handlers as mods, but for technically wrong things
they'd have to be curated very carefully to make sure they only remove what's truly bad or harmful and leave most things (and opinionated things) alone
@AndrasDeak hence why I said it's a start. I also don't know how to make it non-abusable but historic inertia is too strong for some wrong answers. That's a problem in my view
@VLAZ the company has been claiming for a long time that they are working on the problem of obsoletion (which is the more common variant of this problem)
An Oracle expert friend of mine asked me to edit a typo in an answer he gave and comment on a wrong answer to the same question. I did it told him "you owe me some rep!" after downvoting the wrong anwser.
My point is: There may be some users that value too much the rep, maybe because they are not very active and dislike the rep loss of downvoting. I would not suggest setting it to 0, mut somehow mitigate its impact on low rep accounts
@AndrasDeak It's not even obsolition what I'm talking about. It's answers that were wrong even at the time of posting them but people who (presumably) didn't understand the implications just upvoted them. Have a look at some of the highest voted regex answers. Especially when it comes to email validation. Some are dangerously wrong.
@AndrasDeak I disagree. A lot of those answers are the go-to copy/paste for clueless developers. I have no doubt that one of those snippets has denied me the ability to sign up at least once.
@bradbury9 yes, but we're not missing the downvotes from the 125-rep users. If only the users above 2k started to downvote regularly we'd see a different picture
@bradbury9 I know you posted it as an example, but I believe this breaks the rules of this room. You are telling other people how to vote, which we are not allowed to do. Even if the answer deserves downvotes and you are not asking people to cast any this message might still send mixed signals.
@VLAZ In the past 30days the most commented post is this stackoverflow.com/questions/62144477/… but I am sure there were longer chains it's just that mods delete them if they get over certain number
@Braiam No idea, either. They want to make sure the email address is really real, and you aren't trying to lie to them or anything. And then the validation doesn't allow +, for example.
This part SimpleDateFormat dt1 = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-mm-dd"); is the solution :) It's even part of the solution in a third answer. I mean it's not copy'n'paste, it's sort of selective copy'n'paste
@VLAZ It depends on what you're actually wanting to listen for. Are you wanting to know about any downvotes that occur, or just ones made by the person currently viewing the page in the browser in which your JavaScript code is running?
@VLAZ If you want to, you can listen for the AJAX call which the page uses to transmit the vote to the backend, or even intercept that AJAX call. It really depends on what you're wanting to do with the information that the user has indicated they want to downvote.
Could a 10ker who can see it tell me if I got this NAA wrong? I can't remember, or see, what it said but I'm confused as the post has been deleted because of moderation, but my NAA was declined.
@VLAZ You could do that either by checking the state of the button, or by watching for the AJAX call which indicates a downvote, as opposed to the one which indicates an un-vote (removing an upvote and removing a downvote use the same route). Most people are more comfortable listening to click events.
It would be nice if they at least extended the hammer to the lacks mre close reason. If we trust SME's to know it is a dupe, we should also trust that they know there is not enough information to give an answer.