@Dharman I have met with the same thing. They think downvoters should always leave a comment explaining why they downvoted. stackoverflow.com/a/62614818/12708583
@Dharman I posted an answer once, and even added some bonuses. The OP got upset because my answer was too good and "took all the fun out of learning." No win game, sometimes.
@10Rep Often, with folks who are clearly 'beginners', I will try to engage them, and 'educate' rather than post a copy/pasta code block. But it's hard, sometimes, to find the right balance.
@Makyen I think they meant to say "Convert Javascript function to PHP". There was another similar question yesterday, it must be this weekend's homework...
@Dharman Err...what thing that I said earlier? Which part is a waste of moderators' time? No moderators seem to have been involved in either of the cases you linked.
@Dharman Yes... mod flag. Looking into it now. Already found the associated account. No point in bringing it up on Meta, unless you're wondering whether that is allowed by site rules (spoiler alert: it's not).
@CodyGray Just for curiosity's sake, how would one raise a mod-flag for an issue like that. Unlike you, us mere mortals can't find the 'associated account'; should we just raise a flag one one of our own posts, with a link and brief explanation?
@AdrianMole Right. Just pick one of your own posts and use the textbox to type in the same sort of explanation you'd give here. But...maybe even more details, since here you might be saying "what does everyone think?", whereas with a mod flag, you'd be saying "I think this is a problem because ..., so please do ..."
@CodyGray Could you please take a look at the comment section here: stackoverflow.com/questions/62614674/…. I think all comments have been deleted, but you are a moderator and can see.
@10Rep Yeah, they were deleted. I deleted them. That's the part I misread earlier. I thought you were the one complaining about it and leaving the comments, when you were actually trying to explain.
Regarding the above answer's page, there are roughly 10 answers in total that add no new value to the page and could safely be purged for the benefit of future researchers.
@Scratte Responses that the flag is "invalid" act as counter-flags. If counter-flags (responses of "invalid") >= flags, then the flags are dismissed. If enough flags accumulate on a message, the message is deleted and the user suspended from chat.
I guess so. Or maybe it requires 2-3 people, I don't know. I just got a flag for a message that I couldn't possibly see how it would be R/A but I had to check for context. By the time I was done, I couldn't approve or deny the flag.
@VLAZ as Makyen says above... it needs N many valid votes, minus invalid votes and not sure votes... it just happens I was about and invalidated the flag and like on main, mods votes are binding - else it would have require 5 more users to validate it, or 2/3 (can't remember which) invalid votes.
@Scratte Well, it's your browser, so you have ultimate control. You could always add some CSS or a userscript, but, no, there's no stock method of doing so.
There's been many discussions about chat flags... the general consensus is that they're somewhat borked... but not many people use chat and it hasn't seen any dev. love in ages...
I think I just realized why one of my green ticks was removed and not placed anywhere else on the page. I reckon the OP actually thinks the "thanks" reaction is supposed to take the place of the green tick. This feature big time sucks. stackoverflow.com/posts/43837686/…
@RyanM I've not found that to happen consistently. I've had an answer recently where it was accepted/unaccepted twice (OP didn't understand they could only accept one answer) and there was no +15 or -15 on my rep for the day.
I thought link-only were VLQ. After all, if the solution is at the end of the link, it does answer the question... and it could be fixed if OP copied and pasted the appropriate info from the link
Also just copy-pasting the info doesn't quite follow the spirit of stackoverflow.com/help/referencing, which states that you should have some of your own content.
Left a custom flag on that one since this is becoming a pattern
@RyanM back to the whole NAA thing, I see this as being like the "look at manual for preg_split, third argument" answer in that without markup it does still have the URL of the manual page and text to say where to look.
@Nick that is, IMHO, considerably more useful, because even if the link moves I could still find it. It even clues me in that I got the third argument wrong somehow, and I could maybe even just check that in my IDE. This links a random API doc page and tells me nothing about what I need to do with it. At best, I've got some keywords for Google research, and even those are partly extracted from the URL.
I can never tell if a page qualifies for roomba on my mobile because I haven't memorized the criteria. Will this roomba? stackoverflow.com/q/62358150/2943403
@Dharman I still feel like I'm missing something here. A message in SOCVR is not a flag. So are you disagreeing that it makes sense to flag these, because such a flag would just waste moderators' time? Maybe. If you have a gold badge, you might not need to involve a moderator. But you still can, if you want a moderator to reach out to the user and request them to stop re-asking the same question. We have a canned template for that.
@Cody in this case duplicated answers... which someone raised a custom flag for the 3rd time it got posted and it got handled... still not sure why you've been pinged here :)
To be clear, I'm not complaining about the fact that I was pinged. More just trying to understand Dharman's point, because it's been weeks since he's said anything I disagreed with. That's some kind of record or something.
Cody, I just think it's a very tiny offense. Reposting the same question again happens so often that I feel it is a little bit of waste of time to ask moderators to request to talk to them. After all I could tell them the same thing in comments. It's not like a mod will delete the question or suspend the user right?
I didn't ask Cody to handle any flag. I don't even think I flagged the one I used as an example.
@Dharman I absolutely delete reposted duplicates, immediately after closing them as a duplicate. I also typically send a message reaching out to the user, even on the first offense. Can't speak for other mods, but I think that reaction is actually pretty common.
I can't say. Depends on your goals, I guess. Practically speaking, SOCVR is probably going to get it closed faster than a mod. But mods can do more than SOCVR can, in terms of deletion, reaching out to the user, and solving the problem for good.
Jon confused me a bit by mentioning duplicated answers. Those are a horse of a different color, as they'll raise an automatic mod flag. Nobody really needs to do anything about that.
If we are making a features wishlist, I'll have the nega-bounty, please. It will allow me to spend 50, 100, 250, 500 of my own rep to reduce the number of upvotes on a post by 5, 10, 25, 50 (respectively).
@mickmackusa Eek, no - there are some folks with high-rep who are either permanently stuck in amateur mode, or maliciously motivated, or both. A recipe for a massive bun-fight ;-)
@mickmackusa This has been proposed in an answer on meta, if I remember correctly. But I think the answer was edited after a comment from a high reputation user saying that they would be able to bury any other user with this feature.
Bury the post, not the user. Affect the vote tally, not the user's rep. One nega-bounty per user per post. ...we all realize that I am making this up on the fly, right?
...this is not something I've had in the oven for a while.
There have been utterly incorrect posts that I have found with massively huge upvotes that will mislead researchers. I can't curate / make a dent in those posts with a single downvote.
Hmm, this is a thought provoking exercise. Another part of this feature is that there would be a few preset "reasons" for the downty (just like the bounties have) and of course a custom field as well. This would mean that there would be a user and a reason bound to the event. Then if other users came along and disagreed with the downty, then they could upvote the answer.
Ultimately, by not affecting the user's rep and only the post's tally, this becomes less of a weapon against users and more a weapon for curation.
If the cost-reduction ratio isn't steep enough, boost the factor until the sweet spot is realized.
@mickmackusa I think the problem is that it can just be used to get rid of the competition. Which would be a bad thing in my opinion. Tactical downvoting is already a thing, of course that is anonymous, but one could always argue that the other answer is inferior and must go.
I just encountered a suggested edit which added the automation tag to a C#/Selenium question.
This left me wondering: What is the intent of that tag?
I started by searching for a definition of "automation". Wikipedia says:
Automation, or Labor-saving technology is the technology by which a proce...
@Scratte I am hoping for something "I can't read that." I am not expecting perfect English, how could I,being non-native. But some care with writing is not too much, especially if those who are adressed are those who are expected to help.
I think some users really try, but fail. I can't tell if they're not trying. I imagine if they were, they'd be more discouraged now.
@Yunnosch RyanM did a SEDE query yesterday. Turns out you were right :) You are more talkative than most others in here. Unfortunately the query was modified, so it seems all traces are gone.
@Vega At least NAA, if not R/A (abuse of system). It's substantially plagiarized from various possible sources. Some possible sources can be found with various Google searches (example). I've raised a custom flag wrt. the plagiarism.
@Makyen You were much more patient than me. I did try to google a couple of suspect phrases but got nothing. I couldn't bother continuing to review it. My brain is currently melting anyway and reading that did feel like a further abuse of it.
@Scratte maybe? It's also common for drive-by trolling. Post some nonsense and don't engage further. A well crafted message can generate reply for days or weeks in a forum. The key points are to make it just legible enough for people to want to read it but insert stuff they'd be compelled to disagree with and insult you over. With some luck, you may even get people banned on a forum over this.
@VLAZ I can certainly understand that. Really. I definitely didn't read the whole thing, because, well, it's an obvious delete. The only real issue is how to delete it/comment/flag.
I happened to get decent results from my second, or third, Google search. The key was selecting a portion of the text which wasn't appropriate for the person to modify to make it sound like they were the ones talking. Another indicator of where it wouldn't have been modified was that the tenses or quantities within a sentence don't match (i.e. they didn't change that portion of the sentence).
What I'll normally do is select a moderate portion of the text and use the context menu to search on Google for the selection. Then, once the page opens, add " to the beginning and end of the search terms. If I don't get anything, then I'll read what I'm searching for more closely and drop portions that might be slightly changed by the OP.
So, most of the time I leave 2 or less comments. Good, I really didn't think I was THAT talkative overall. Although I do have 10k comments on SO which is a lot more than I anticipated :O
@CodyGray Does it have to be an exact copy-paste or is there some wiggle room? i.e., should I still go to the trouble of raising a flag if they've only copy-pasted 90% of the answer?
@RyanM I don't like MRE specifically because it sounds like food. I prefer MCVE because it's like in Red Alert 2 the MCV was essentially the core of your base. Like how the code is usually the core of your question.
@VLAZ Valid, though I like "Reproducible" better. A "complete" Android app won't fit in a question, so you need enough that I can reproduce it if I care to
If I were a moderator on both SO and SU, I'd migrate and immediately close as a dupe of superuser.com/questions/334793/…, but there are very few people on this earth who can do that, and it's not worth bothering them for this :-)
I know there are some mods who were elected on other multiple stacks but can't think of anybody at the moment. Well, nobody who is still a mod, though. Monica was a mod on several places.
The other communities are not quite as active as SO. For a quick example on Meta.SO the last 50 most recent topics (that aren't deleted yet!) barely go a week back. On Meta.Worldbuilding you may not even get a post a week some times.
@Scratte this would be a good example of a question that I would want migrated if it could be (I've already flagged it as such - the flag was marked helpful with no action, which I assume means "I agree with you but it's not enough of a problem to bother a CM")
@RyanM I don't know how mods actually decide whether or not to pass such a request 'up' to the CMs, or even what happens if/when they do. But there are only a very few CMs (5, last current count), so their flag queues are probabaly even more swollen than the mods'.
On the other hand, despite there being fewer of them and having much wider scope, it is their full-time job, so they have considerably more time to dedicate to it. None of which, is, of course, intended to downplay the work they do or the amount of it they have.
Not sure what the philosophy is, there. But, when a new Stack site is created (there was no Quantum Stack when that qubit question was posted), I would like to think that SO is 'scanned' for appropriate posts to move en bloc.