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12:00 AM
 
12:53 AM
@Makyen - who actions these kinds of requests? And, given that people (possibly crawlers, too?) can see edited content, what would be the point of "I'd edit out the NSFW content,"?
 
Crawlers don't see deleted content, unless that crawler has an account with 10k+ reputation. requests are for users with 20k+ reputation, who can vote to delete.
 
@tink If a question contains NSFW content, but can still be a reasonable on-topic question, it's fine to just edit it out, while preserving the question
 
But...really...these types of requests are actioned by moderators, which is why it was also flagged.
 
@tink If the post was something that could be edited into being a semi-decent question or answer with just the removal of NSFW content, or the replacement of that content by placeholders, then the right thing to do is to just edit the post so that it's something that the site can keep.
 
Thanks Cody, Makyen, Certain :)
 
12:58 AM
 
1:15 AM
@tink Under most conditions, I'd just ask for spam or R/A flags (spam/R/A flags), or leave it with the SD report that was generated for it. For this question, it had an overall format that, without a closer look, made it appear like an actual question, so straight spam/R/A flags are a bit problematic. It's also possible the user posted this without the intent for it to be spam/R/A, making it unclear they should be getting the penalty associated with the post being deleted as spam/R/A.
In such cases, the most common things to happen are A) it gets enough red flags (spam/R/A) to delete it and the penalty is applied. B) a moderator responds to the existing flags and deletes the post without raising a spam/R/A flag of their own, which deletes the post without applying the penalties. The next most common thing, but a considerable distance behind (A) and (B), is that C) three 20k users vote to delete the post. The request in here was to have (C) happen.
I had also raised a custom mod-flag, but those sometimes take a bit of time to get a resonse. I posted the requests in here because we're in the lowest traffic time for the SE network, so there's likely the lowest number of moderators around, which might have resulted in an even longer time to have the flag actioned. Fortunately, that was not the case.
 
1:55 AM
tl;dr: mods are slackers
There is actually an option B.5: a moderator "disputes" the spam/abusive flags on the post and then deletes it, which has no penalty either to the flaggers or to the original poster. Spam/abusive flags are the only flags that moderators can "dispute". For all other flags, they're either "helpful" or "declined".
 
You can dispute NAA flags if at least one reviewer voted delete already but voting Looks OK in review iirc.
Not that I think that's particularly useful...
 
That's true, there is a hack for that.
I've never done it, and don't plan on starting now. :-)
 
3:34 AM
@Makyen ta, once again! =}
 
4:22 AM
@CodyGray I wouldn't have put it that way. :-;
You mods are doing a great job, even though the number of available moderators is significantly below what was indicated earlier in the year as the desired number of active mods. Handling of flags is quite fast. It's massively better than it's been at some points in the past (e.g. there have been times in the past when waiting more than a month for a custom mod-flag to be handled wasn't uncommon).
 
 
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\o
 
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7:44 PM
@גלעדברקן Could also be closed as duplicate. But is there an 'official' SO policy on solving problems for live competitions?
 
7:57 PM
@AdrianMole there is not.
only that the question needs to be good.
 
 
1 hour later…
Would anyone support me in deleting this question? Should I even cast my vote if no one else would support it? stackoverflow.com/q/1692754/1839439
 
10:23 PM
@Dharman Hmm - you'd be removing a lot of rep from some well-established folks!
 
@AdrianMole I don't think this is how it works. The post is deleted and the rep stays.
 
Really? I thought deleted posts = deleted rep.
 
I wish I would be removing their rep too, but that would not be really fair
@AdrianMole If the rep is not locked in yet and you delete the post then the rep gain is lost. In this case this is a really old thread so all the rep should stay.
 
There's a discussion on Meta: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/290370/…
… but, after a quick look through, I'm still not sure what actually happens!
... anyway, I can't help with the potential deletion.
 
> That's it. No reputation loss. Nothing else untold. It's just gone.
 
11:05 PM
Users get to keep rep if post is older than 60 days and score is >3
 
@SamuelLiew Is it AND or OR?
 
and
 
11:49 PM
@Dharman IIRC, the reputation for the bounty is lost. However, I'd have to double check on meta.
@Makyen Hmmm... maybe it was that it used to be lost, but they fixed it.
 
How are you talking with yourself?
Are ROs allowed to reply to themselves?
 
@Dharman Anyone can reply to themselves. You can either manually insert the :<message ID> at the start of your message, or have a userscript which adds the reply arrow to your own posts.
 

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