@E_net4feelstargeted This only shows that there is something seriously wrong with how many people see downvoting. So many people claiming that we don't need them or that they are hurtful.
Oh. That will make me suspicious of every 1 repper now :D
@Vega I think it's useful, considering the 139K views. Not sure how it could have avoided attracting all those links, since it appears the answer is "No, but.. "
@Vega As for whether it needs focus...I don't think so, it seems like a specific question with a correct, highly upvoted answer. Although if I were a 10k user I would probably delete-vote a number of those answers.
on the other hand, people have found at least some of them useful...
Is this the sort of thing where a custom mod flag of "hey this is kind of a mess do you want to maybe delete half of this?" would be appropriate? I've never sent a flag like that.
An attempt is not the same as fine. Offering alternative solution when the answer is no, is much better than fine, in my opinion. Then it's a proper answer.
@Scratte A proper answer is one that answers the question, as said in the help page: Read the question carefully. What, specifically, is the question asking for?
I reacted because you seem to think that any answer there that doesn't strictly keep to just answering the question should be removed. Even the accepted answer doesn't do that. None of those answers are solely the word "No".
I concur with Scratte, these all answer the question, it's just ...a mess.
I sent the following custom mod flag: "This question, which is a good question with a correct, highly upvoted answer, has attracted a large pile of opinion-based "recommend your/your favorite tool"-type answers. It could probably use some cleanup of many of the answers to stop it from turning into a tool recommendation question for websocket testing tools."
at this rate I'm gonna have a significant chunk of the pending custom mod flag queue...currently at 8
@Braiam The much larger moderators' toolbox is useful in such situations: the solution may be to lock the question and note that if Postman ever adds support they can flag a moderator to unlock it.
@RyanM Delete-voting answers is a 20k rep privilege and requires the answer to be at score < 0. None of the non-deleted answers on that question currently qualify, nor could be made to qualify by someone wanting to delete-vote.
@Scratte yes. It bypasses the quality controls of the site - if a question reaches, say -5 and is reposted as is, that not really nice. There is some grey area if it's substantially altered namely in what constitutes "substantially altered". Still, reposting is usually seen as bad. Oh, and it's rare that it's really reposted and improved, much rarer to even constitute "substantially"
Also worth noting that if the question is bad anyway, it's likely to attract downvotes even when reposted. The user might get a question ban if they keep reposting the same bad question.
@Scratte As far as I'm aware, self-deleted questions also hurt your good standing for the question ban algorithm. From a site moderation standpoint, the question be at zero score but it might have a close vote or two against it. Re-posting gets rid of CVs and flags.
I don't know the question, perhaps it was OK. Perhaps it didn't have downvotes. Perhaps it didn't have any CVs/flags either. It's still not an argument for deleting and reposting. That's a lot of conditionals stacked already and only at best make the reposting neutral. There are other arguments against it, though - it's possible that somebody was drafting an answer already.
Deleting the question hurts both the asker and the answerer here but preventing the post. The answerer might not see the reposted question or might not want to engage with it repeatedly. So, there are a lot of downsides, even if the question wasn't bad.
@VLAZ It's been stated that deleting a question after it has been answered is the worst thing you can do wrt. the metric for question bans. Such a deletion is considered aggressively hostile.
I left the link Machavity gave on the new Question. But.. it's not likely to get any answers with a comment appealing for them to not delete their Question. So, in a sense it's kind of unfriendly.
@Scratte I don't think I would have had the guts to del-vote that questions, precisely for that reason. When someone loses 95 reputation of course they are going to come knocking. Although I agree that it's clearly a duplicate and is a valid target for deletion.
@Dharman Yes, sorry. I noticed this comment on your post by Jean-François Fabre. Which made me wonder about the term.
And then I couldn't figure out what I even think the line between low, medium (if there even is a medium), high is. So I got curious if there was any general idea about what is meant by high reputation.
@Dharman If you are asking from a technical perspective, then my understanding is that they have the ability to delete any post. That doesn't mean they would do so.
No I am asking if there is anything in the site rules or anything in ethical code of the community that they have to adhere to when deleting stuff
The help page says "A lot of the moderation work is mundane: deleting obvious spam, closing blatantly off-topic questions, and culling some of the worst-rated posts on the site."
If you become a mod and you see Cody's negatively scoring answer, can you decide yourself to just delete it
But I imagine that they are moderated by meta and helped by each other. I would assume that if there were actions that they thought could be considered contentious that they would bring it up in a discussion post in the moderator's chat room
But mods are selected from folks like us. I see some of us being more restraint when deleting posts and some of us are more eager to press that delete button.
@Dharman Unless it was obviously harmful, and should be deleted immediately (highly unlikely from such a user), then in the interest of good relations, it would probably be a good idea to consult first (with them/other mods). However, if you are referring to within the context of the recent discussion on Meta about a question being deleted, then: I rarely look at who the user is that created a post, except in the context of tracking down spam/R/A posts/users.
So, it's not unlikely that I wouldn't have known who wrote the answers on that question, although I would have at least looked at the answer content to see if it was exceptional and worthy of significantly increasing the value of the question.
So what you are saying is that we trust the moderators to do what's best for the site and they should vote the same way as if they were not moderators. If they make a mistake hopefully someone points it out on Meta
I would hope moderators are more accountable for their actions, in that they do act on "their" own. And it's not exactly uncommon for users to complain on meta, so perhaps a change of behavior occur to ensure that lines are not crossed for some of them.
@Dharman Basically, yes. Voting for a moderator is supposed to be because you trust their judgement, and that they are willing to be accountable for their actions to both Meta and the other moderators.
According to that help page I linked, can a moderator just go on deleting spree and delete low-quality posts like this stackoverflow.com/q/34677564/1839439
I assume this is what was meant by culling. Normal users would first have to close and the vote to delete, so that would mean that at least 3 people would have to coordinate such task. That creates much more visibility and error checking. Mods have greater power and they can just go through 100 questions a day and purge the site, but what I am getting at is, whether they are encouraged to do so and is appropriate, since they never had such power as normal users.
@Dharman That would probably stir things up a bit. Some negatively scored Questions have positively scored Answers. It would almost be like having 3000 moderators..
@Scratte Yes: it's not allowed. Just like asking the same question multiple times. It's an abuse of our limited resources. Please flag for moderator attention. We'll reach out to the user. But as @Machavity says, the questions need to be obviously the same. Don't expect us to see connections/relationships in all technology under the sun. (cc @Dharman)
I don't know if we're allowed to say this in public, but I think it's pretty obvious if you're active on the site, both in browsing and in flagging: moderator activity is highly variable. Some moderators do relatively little. Other moderators are insane beasts who handle hundreds of flags per day on a regular basis. Then, there are a handful of normal humans who do things like handle somewhere between 50-200 flags per day, with 30-60 minutes of engagement most days of the week.
Because real life sometimes interferes, we want moderator candidates to expect to spend at least 30-60 minutes per day moderating, and to expect a high flag volume (because, well, there is one).
If you set expectations high, then even if you fall, you don't fall to 0.