@JohnDvorak at a minimum, disclosure of affiliation is required. This user has been warned in the past and continues to post links without disclosure. That means the next step is to treat them as a garden-variety spammer.
@Nkosi: He's been here before and knows that this sort of discussion and moderation rule change request should be held on the meta site, not here, but declines to do this for some reason. Instead he vents here.
@HovercraftFullOfEels you saying that I "know that this sort of discussion and moderation rule change request should be held on the meta site" implies that either I agree with that idea and/or that you stating that idea makes it somehow true. Neither of those statements are necessarily correct.
@HovercraftFullOfEels I have been informed of that opinion, which I don't agree with, yes. I think it's an issue for the site concept, not sure it's appropriate for meta.
@גלעדברקן well, this is not a room where you can vent continuously. Please take your frustration else where. Maybe yell at the sea. I'm told that is pretty effective.
@גלעדברקן The way that you presented the issue, just linking to a couple of posts and stating "shame on SO" is inappropriate. While we're willing to discuss issues, just calling "shame" isn't acceptable in this room. Please refrain from doing that here in the future.
loss
No excerpt or wiki. 298 questions.
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
Describes a general "loss" in most cases. Lost settings, values, tips, etc.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Too generic a concep...
@rene since you've taken up this issue with what I said -- "shame on... —used to say that someone should feel sorry for doing something wrong" (merriam-webster dictionary). While I don't see anything wrong with expressing the meaning in the phrase, as I did for the issue I mentioned, I can understand if you feel those particular words may have overloaded connotations. I'll do my best to inquire about the appropriateness of my phrasing and/or to do so more tentatively next time.
@גלעדברקן I may be completely off with my thoughts on this subject, and I don't know what renee's actual thoughts or motivation may be, but I don't think it's Renee taking issue, he's merely pointing out that SE strives to stay objective. "shame" is an emotion, not quantifiable, and as such not a good thing to be throwing about as a matter for discussion ...
@tink Shame isn't just an emotion. It's a psychologically painful form of embarrassment, and it is often wished upon someone as an harsh mental punishment and the hope that the shamed person experiences prolonged social ostracism. People use it far too casually.
From a philosophical point of view, I think its casual use is interesting - if someone says "it's a shame we cannot meet this week", then they do not mean it is shameful, and yet that is exactly what has just been said. I wonder if it is moderately better to say that it is a "pity" instead, and yet even that is inappropriate, since trivial disappointments do not rise to the level of warranting pity.
@tink there doesn't seem to me a reasonable interpretation of rene's comment (chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/46822027#46822027) as not taking issue with what I had said. To be clear, I was not offended by that comment. I tried to respond as best I could.
@tink Indeed. In fact, I don't mean for my own remarks to be a strong disagreement - it was more about adding colour and detail to an interesting discussion.
Yeah, I've often handled that type of problem that way. Usually, I'll only move something like that to /dev/null if it doesn't look like the request will be handled reasonably quickly, if the second request is substantially later than the original, which would result in the request being active for considerably longer than the normal 3 days, or if the second request provides an undo amount of exposure for the request. In other words, it's a judgement call.