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@Dharman Yes. Mods can flag as spam/abusive just like anyone else, and it has the same result (deleted by Community as spam/abusive). Only difference is that a single flag by a mod immediately reaches the threshold (what normally takes 6 regular users' flags).
Moderators can also, of course, delete posts. If a moderator deletes a post that has been community-flagged as rude/abusive, the post will show as deleted by the moderator. The system will still warn that it might be spam, but the -100 reputation penalty and other spam precautions will not be applied to the posting account.
So we kinda have two different routes for dealing with it, depending on whether or not we think that the post should have the spam/abusive penalties attached to it.
Could I have your guidance, please? Two things are going on in this question. First, I am not sure that the OP is on the legal side by trying to hide the brand mark. Second, the most upvoted answer on this duplicate question (no accepted answer) seems to be more "legal". Still, the first question is more complete having some code and an accepted answer.
Should I CV as a dup the second one? Are there any actions to be taken for the legal part, or it's not "my business"? Does the fact that it can be resolved programatically, makes it on-topic?
@ekad Yes, it is a duplicate. also very poor one because it has no mcve and answer is mostly useless because it is completely out of context (no mcve) and most likely not very helpful for anyone with similar issue
@treyBake Hah... Actually that's KYC compliance procedures and you can automate them. Part of the job was to include some of these in financial processes ^^
@Kyll o/ :D and that would be interesting to see code-wise. would love to do clever stuff like that, PHP I'm afraid wasn't quite built for cooler purposes
@NathanOliver-ReinstateMonica me favourite is dearest creature in creation and especially the reaction of a French soldier to that: "I'd rather die than learn that!"
Elysium Planitia is a geographical region (a plain) on Mars. The standard way to refer to it is "at". If you're landing on some specific terrain feature (like a crater or volcano) at EP you could say "we landed on a crater at EP but it's still "at EP".
or if you're within the crater's basin wall you can also say in the crater
I suppose it wouldn't be the worst thing to land in a volcano on Mars, either, since they're not active anymore, but it's still less than ideal...
@TylerH if it's in relation to the type of English - I get confused when people ask for native English speakers as they have different words etc. and I'm not 100% on all the differences/rules per type
@treyBake wiki is a rather bad source though for UK vs US; check the InSght landing sequence description. They can't even decide whether to consistently use proper unit and put the freedom ridicule in parentheses, or the opposite way around.
Nasa is a weird one though. On the one hand they are a scientific organisation which banned the usage of non-SI units for official use; OTOH they are a Merican organisation having to do public outreach to people who might never have heard about metre-per-second or units of Pascal.
@Vega personally I would go the other way around.. I don't see any need for code in question (it's how do I..) not debug stuff and the correct answer is that you should not remove it on a free version
@Das_Geek indeed a lot of medical research these days focuses on tuning viruses to deliver manmade payloads in a way that conventional delivery mechanisms can't
Sounds like a BTEC - pass, merit, distinction or fail are given as grades but the courses tend to be for more vocational practices and/or apprenticeships in general
you could do psychological research into why X method or company or personality is effective in business but it'd be a psych PhD rather than a business one. Or an economics PhD if you focus on the math/numbers side of some business model or practice
Check all the delete answers on the original... I also left a comment on the new answer, it's very little respect to developers of free stuff to remove the credit.
@treyBake I thought about posting it on the knitting thread, but got dam there are some really impressive things on there. Anything I would make would be like finger painting next to them. I wonder if they're designing the art outside the knitting interface then uploading.
@Das_Geek yeah, that's why I never posted my helmet xD I was so proud of it too xD I think last year I saw a gif knit, so I imagine that peeps are doing some cool stuff outside of the editor and doing it that way
@M-- It is not yet an MCVE, IMHO an MCVE must be in question and must not be an external link. The links are only backup but they cannot depend on resources as important as the MCVE.
@Adriaan For what it's worth, preposition usage in English is highly idiomatic. There isn't really a corpus of "rules" as such. I agree with the advice folks gave you in here earlier, regarding landing "on" Mars "at" a site. That's pretty conventional, but nobody is going to accuse you of doing it wrong if you substituted "at" for "on" in those sentences, or vice versa. And it will most certainly be understandable.
Unusual preposition usage is an excellent signal that someone is a non-native speaker. But sometimes even that heuristic isn't perfect. It might just mean that someone is a native speaker from a different region than you, where the idiomatic usage of prepositions is different.
On a related note, congrats on admittance into a PhD program! I evidently have utterly failed in keeping up with your life, but that's really cool. What field are you in?
I greatly want to go into a PhD program someday. The prospect of having to leave the working world is a scary one, though; I don't like not having enough money.
@Das_Geek It’s something I’ve strongly considered, but I ran out of money in undergrad, plus other issues. The sad thing for me is, even being in the working world, I still don’t have enough money.
@CodyGray Yeah, that'll probably be me. I actually got accepted into a PhD program while I was in my undergrad, but the money wasn't there and I was already in crippling debt. At least my job will pay for a master's, so hopefully I can swing a proper MS with a thesis in case the PhD opportunity ever arises
@CodyGray Thanks! As you might've guessed from the question, my "field" is Mars. Specifically its magnetic field. I try to find out how the first ~1000km of the subsurface of the planet looks like
@Das_Geek Meh. No point in doing a masters if you’re planning on a PhD. Unless you’re me, and your undergrad GPA was too pathetic to get you admitted to a PhD program directly…
@CodyGray in Europe more or less everyone does a masters before a PhD, if not actually all. In most unis where I looked for a PhD position, you wouldn't be admitted without one
@CodyGray Yep, it's common in Canada as well. That's where I had gotten accepted. Technically it was for a master's but the professor wanted me for the full shebang
I wonder what the point is. In the US, we have combined masters/PhD programs, with the acknowledgment that the first couple years of a PhD is effectively a masters.
@CodyGray Even in the US, it's not uncommon to apply for a masters only then transition later, especially in the case where you don't have an adviser right away
At the school I went to, even if you were in the "Direct-to-PhD" program, it was still required to present a Master's Thesis and get the actual MS degree
@CodyGray I think every one of my research advisers went that route. One didn't have a choice; at UC Berkeley the professors weren't accepting anyone into their research groups but the school still admitted him
I know several who did the Bachelor/Master/Doctor route. Not sure you can become a Doctor without a Master (there's a British TV series joke in there somewhere)
@Dharman That’s generaly a motivation from the outset, but as I understand it, the perception of “fun” tends to diminish as you go about it. Typically, you get a PhD to become a competent, independent researcher. It is almost always a prerequisite to being an instructor at the college level, and it’s also valuable in industry to have that deep of expertise.
@Dharman I love research, and the academic environment in general. I would pursue a PhD program just to be involved in that process, with the additional bonus that it would qualify me to become a professor.
@Machavity lol
@CodyGray There are still schools which do not accept (or are at least very hesitant to accept) PhD candidates from the pool of their own Bachelor/Master graduates. Something about breadth of experience.
@Das_Geek Oh, absolutely. That’s a different phenomenon, though. That’s seeking cross-pollination. It’s a huge deal in the humanities, but I’ve seen it in the natural sciences, too. Makes good sense to me. Not “breadth” so much as “diversity”.
A Master's is often used as a "proving ground" to determine which candidates are capable of proper research. Especially given the pressure to have advanced degrees, most applicants think they should complete a PhD as a matter of course, but quickly find that they hate research. You can still complete a master's without totally frying yourself from toiling away in the lab
I say that, but I barely made it out of my undergrad research alive haha
I would also argue that (depending on your field), it's easier to complete research as a Masters student than as an undergrad. Most graduate students are only taking one or two classes at a time, so there's much more room in their schedule
@robsiemb For sure, it's not for everyone. I just really like the mental process of taking a vague "what if" and slowly whittling it down to a concrete idea with an actual answer
@Das_Geek I suspect my problem is more with the mechanics around research rather than the discovering-new-stuff bit. Papers are super dry reading, and even worse to write. I'd much rather go build something and see it used :)
@robsiemb Fair enough. I don't mind the writing/reading process. Though I will say that if you choose the right field and get the right professor, there's less of that than you'd think.
Academic reading/writing is a learned skill, just like SO post writing. Once you master it with enough practice, it becomes no big deal. You even begin to like it, think it’s normal, and defend it to others.
@robsiemb I went from quick updates and hardware demos at group meetings, with a hard limit of 1.5 hours per meeting, to vague discussions about everyone's problems and meetings that would last 4+ hours each time. Guess which professor I preferred haha
@CodyGray Just like using Vim; first you struggle and beat your head into a wall, then you're taking up arms to fight in the Great Holy War
@CodyGray No they did not. First 30-60 minutes were paper presentations, which were actually fun; the rest of the meeting was project updates. Problem was the latter portion turned into mini-troubleshooting sessions for each issue, but only a few people could help or even cared.
It was likely due to the fact that the professor was so busy, and group meetings were one of the few times anyone could pick his brain.
@Das_Geek This phenomenon of updating everybody on everything, even things that don’t involve them and for which they lack any relevant background knowledge, is something I’m seeing at work now, too. I can safely say it is an anti-pattern.
@CodyGray Agreed. I don't need to hear about the correct way to expand the wave equation in a given instance if I'm just trying to shine huge lasers on crystals
I've heard agile-type work groups can tend to fall into the same pattern
@Das_Geek Of course, while I say this, I did manage a group of researchers in one of my prior roles, but I tried to mostly find ways to get them help and otherwise stay out of their way. Occasionally, I read a paper and gave them some comments.
@robsiemb Why does everybody think it’s notable when a manager decides to “mostly find ways to get [their group] help and otherwise stay out of their way”? That’s literally the job description of a manager. It shouldn’t be worth calling out, but for some reason, it’s not what most managers do.
@CodyGray (1) this was only one of multiple teams I was managing, and (2) I was at a company where managers who didn't demonstrate technical depth tended to be ignored. This is different, of course, from getting in the team's way.
@CodyGray It's likely they feel the pressure to meddle because they are judged by their teams' performances, and want to make sure things progress in a way that satisfies their managers
What user styles were preventing you from turning off hats? Also...not sure I agree with that being “best practices”. You have to make a choice for your users, and it seems reasonable for the default to be “pro-hat”.
Prefer only flagging patterns. Everyone makes a mistake now and again. Do address the issue, though, created by such a mistake. If it’s a suggested edit, roll it back. If a NAA got missed, it’s fair to flag it for deletion (that’ll require a custom flag, since you can’t flag as NAA twice; you can point us to the incorrect review in that custom flag).
I just can’t agree with that. If you thought the feature was so disruptive or divisive that it needs to be disabled by default, you probably shouldn’t roll it out at all. The ability to disable it is a nice escape hatch, but shouldn’t be assumed as the default. Also, discoverabilty.
Seems it’d be possible to check for presence of mod flair among the reviewer names, and use that to determine that the review had been completed, even without having enough reviewers.
@CodyGray I think you're right about the trimming, but I was conscious of trimming so much commentary it would have become a link-only answer again. I figured the poster was trying to be helpful, so was cutting them a bit of slack (more edits from others are welcome).