I'm wondering why that completely good and self contained Q&A gets that many dowvotes. I believe it's just an attractor for revenge downvoters as giving on one more. The site works weird sometimes.
@Compass You've reviewed 40 posts today, thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 6 minutes and 30 seconds, averaging to a review every 9 seconds.
This is annoying.. half the front page for most recently active keystone.js tag is edits from someone adding the keystonejs tag. It's suggested as a synonym (and obviously should be) but the tag-score required to vote on the synonym probably means it will never be approved (there's only ~250 questions in that tag, good luck having 4 people with enough tagscore even notice the suggestion).
@Magisch You've reviewed 40 posts today (of which 1 was an audit), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 11 minutes and 56 seconds, averaging to a review every 17 seconds.
@FrankerZ Its a large improvement if you're using other means to feed back. For instance at home I use the browser extension to desktop ping me every time a report happens. When doing other stuff, Art's new script reduces the workflow to "Click on report -> flag -> close window via hotkey"
@FrankerZ As soon as six flags have been raised, I shouldn't be able to see the post. My request happened to go through before the delete occurred, thus I called it a race condition.
@kayess Nick name for people and slang residing in North East England.
> When referring to the people, as opposed to the dialect, dictionary definitions of a Geordie typically refer to "a native or inhabitant of Newcastle upon Tyne, England, or its environs", an area that encompasses Blyth, Ashington, North Tyneside, Newcastle, South Tyneside and Gateshead.
"Hey, we have way too little qualified IT workers at hand!" "Let's get more from other countries!" "Let's make them go through tons of papers to have a chance!"
@PraveenKumar Yes, but especially in this situation :p
Downvoter here. Pointing out typos in answers is not useful as it will only help OP and not future readers. This kind of answer should be downvoted. You can and should vote to close questions caused by typos as "Typo / No repro". — Kyll3 mins ago
OP Is looking at a delayed chargeback from the guy they defrauded the money from (the money likely came from another victim's account) and potentially a criminal money laundering investigation
He ended up being charged with money laundering, imprisoned 30 days, his credit went to the trash, he had to pay 2k+ CAD in lawyer fees, and lost his job in the crossfire
for instance, in the US, you can be arrested and charged with something, later proven innocent, but your lawyer costs and the cost of being in prison are still yours to bear, unless the police did something seriously wrong in their process, and if they did, you have to sue for that in civil court, again on your own dime
The fact that this can be life-destroying to someone (especially since the US is at-will employment, you can be fired instantly for missing a day due to prison) is often used by prosecutors to "plea out" e.G accept guilt and a lesser sentence like probation for something people didn't do and the prosecutors know would never stick
@Magisch Very true. If you get arrested for something sexual, even if never convicted it is very hard to get your life back together. Normally there isn't anything you can do unless you can prove some maliciously did that to you.
Pretty much. I mean if you can prove it is completely false then you have a good chance of getting everything wiped clean. It is finding that proof that can be difficult.
Just look at what is happening to Bill Cosby. I have no idea if he is guilty or not but that doesn't really matter anymore. His credibility is destroyed and I doubt he will get a job again.
@Seth BTW What happened to your rep?!? It went up!!!