From an accountability POV, it's actually quite reasonable to prevent the move-messages from being moved by non-moderators. If it was possible to do so, then it could be quite a bit harder for moderators to track down what really happened in a room. At least with the move-messages, you at least know where to go looking for the content.
The silent failure for trying to move a move-message is better than what it does when an RO tries to move a message by a user who has been deleted. If an RO tries to move a message by a deleted user, then the entire move fails, w/o notification as to exactly why, so none of the messages you're trying to move get moved. At least when you include a move-message in the list of those that are supposed to be moved, the rest of the messages are moved, just not the move-message.
Our archiver has to determine if the message is by a deleted user prior to adding to the list of those messages to move.
user10677470
4:15 AM
@FrankerZ absolutely nothing can be done to salvage things like that, the best thing is to close vote it and down vote it and move on
@IslamElshobokshy As has been mentioned, it's not permitted to make requests about posts in which you are involved. You've answered this question. 'For questions and answers: You are "involved" in the question and all answers to the question if you are the author of the question or the author of any non-deleted, non-community-wiki answer on the question.'
@double-beep If you flag that most likely it will be declined. It's a poor answer but I don't think it qualifies as not an answer. It is a down vote candidate.
@NickA I have learnt from SOBotics, Natty reports that these answers attempt to answer the question (not NAA), but the should not provide off-site resource (VLQ or else what?).
The guidance for 20K deletes is The answer is extremely low quality: There is little to no scope for improvement or The answer doesn't attempt to answer the question; it may be a comment or a separate question altogether.. I don't think it fits that
off-topic in this room, but doesn't seem worthy of meta post. Are mods able to see who downvoted/upvoted answers? Had a minor dispute with someone who answered and shortly after my answer on same post was downvoted. It doesn't feel like a bad answer but I guess that's my opinion. Just curious to see if the mod gods are able to see it or if I need to revise my answer
@treyBake Mods have some tools to let them know when serial voting has occurred, but they cannot see votes. I don't think most CMs can either. IIRC only a developer like Shog9 or Taryn can do that
@treyBake that's also the reason voting fraud beyond what the system automatically detects is rarely investigated; dev time is expensive and spent more useful
@JerryDiPasquale Personally I think its off-topic because it's not programming, it may be better on another site (Server Fault? note i'm not encouraging you to go and ask it there, I don't use server fault so it may be off topic there too)
Sometimes mods confuse me, I never know if I should flag all the comments in a chain as no longer needed or 1 and never know what to expect afterwards either...
@JerryD Keep in mind you should typically not edit questions in such a way that they invalidate existing answers. In this case your edit makes the existing answer not make much sense
@double-beep Gold badge holders can only close a question as a duplicate of a single question. After a question is closed, any gold badge holder (of a tag that is on an appropriately-closed question) can add or remove additional duplicates, up to 5
@BhargavRao I wouldn't say "left out" - just under appreciated maybe? Just more that mods do stuff that needs doing that no one else except a mod can see has happened :)
@double-beep A question will be closed with multiple dup-targets if the close voters select different dup-targets when they vote to close. For example, 1 person selects question A; another person selects question B; yet another close-voter selects question C, each as the dup-target when they separately vote to close. In that case, when the question is closed it will have A, B, and C as dup-targets. As mentioned, gold-tag-badge holders and moderators can edit the list after the question is closed.
I only noticed when I closed a Q as a dupe and then refreshed the page and saw the question had changed to a different one; turns out @TemaniAfif had adjusted the dupe target to a better one but I never would have known had I not gone to the timeline
I was confused at first because I assumed someone had seen the closure, gone to my suggested target, and then edited the grammar of the question title, but I was surprised because caching usually isn't that quick, so I went to the question and its title was still the same, so I was like "huh"
that's what prompted me to go look at the timeline
@TylerH what I mean is - although it'd be nice to review changes like that (as you put them - as "meta data") - for the amount of people who could review that and the number of people who can do anything about it - is it really worth the system bumping it
@JonClements I agree it's probably not worth bumping in almost all cases, but it should be displayed still for accountability/transparency. While the record is there for users in the timeline/revision history, we shouldn't have to go there to see that it was in fact edited more recently than the front page says.
I guess my beef is that if the page bothers to tell me when a question was last edited, it ought to tell the truth
Hmm, okay I can't seem to find this question at all. @JonClements would you perhaps have some method of looking for this? A css question Mjolnir'd by me whose target dupe was changed by Temani Afif?
@StephenKennedy That should only be there or a brief time while data is being collected. On question pages, under default settings, it shouldn't be a human-noticeable time. In the close-vote review queue and MagicTag, or under some other conditions, data is fetched from the SE API, which should only take a very brief time (usually <1s). You may have also changed the setting such that data is fetched from the SE API on question pages, then there will be a very brief delay.
If you are seeing "..." as the status on a page for an extended time, then something is wrong.
@Adriaan Yep, when I once (long ago) told my gf I would buy a Cray if I could convince the down stairs neighbors to accept the cooling engines in their spare room...
@StephenKennedy Definitely... When I built my wifes, I gave her some of my old parts and bought some new ones for myself, once I put it all together I couldn't for the life of me figure out what was wrong because it wasn't working
Ended up pulling out parts one at a time and nothing fixed it, turned out to be the motherboard
Computers are stupid anyway. My Spotify player can't see the amp it was happily talking to yesterday nor can it see chromecast. So, coding in silence it is :/ le sigh
@StephenKennedy then try opening a laptop. Nightmare, as there's always a hidden screw somewhere and the damn thing won't open. Once you pry it open, the hard drive usually falls on the floor along with the DVD cable that breaks under DVD weight.
Almost killed this laptop wanting to upgrade the memory. Well obviously it survived :)
I recently came across the triggers tag while reviewing suggested edits. Somebody wanted to add database-triggers to a question.
Thinking I'd spotted something that should probably be setup as a tag synonym, I had a closer look, and triggers seems to be horribly ambiguous.
From the just first p...