@10Rep I don't understand what's unclear about this question. It has the common misconception that timestamps have time zones (they do not), but it seems clear what they mean. Could you elaborate?
@Vickel It could be. If the domain is used again, SmokeDetector will catch it. I haven't yet added a specific watch for the domain, because it's already detected with a pattern match reason, and the question appeared to be close enough to other similar legitimate (off-topic) questions which we see, such that I feel it's best to assume good faith. If the domain wasn't detected by a pattern match, then I would have added it as a watch.
One of the reasons not to specifically watch the domain at this time is that the user is also using their company name as their username, which matches the domain. If they were to actually link to their domain, then another detection would be triggered which detects links that are to domains similar to the OP's username. If it was also watched, then there would be 3 detections on that hypothetical post, making it much more likely to be autoflagged, which I'd prefer to avoid, at least for now.
and it was their first question (what I can see) since they joined (which speaks in their favour), but since I cannot see deleted answers (yet) I wouldn't know previous attempts
@Vickel Only moderators can search for deleted posts, or see them listed in a user's profile. Even with >10k rep, you can only see the deleted posts you have links to (or deleted answers on questions you're viewing). So, seeing if they had previous deleted posts isn't something you'll be able to, even with > 10k rep. OTOH, you can look on metasmoke to see if anything was previously caught by SmokeDetector for the user.
@Vickel np. You can get to the listing for the author of a post by clicking on the [MS] link in the SmokeDetector report. From that page, you can click on the OP's username, which will bring up all the posts detected for that user's account on that SE site. However, spammers commonly change accounts and also post on multiple sites. Those are not covered in the user's page.
@Scratte Moderators trump room owners. We are effective ROs of any chat room on SO. You should make your moderator rule/style outweigh your RO rule/style.
@Makyen Yeah, I almost can't believe it. I know basically nothing about web design, and that's the very first thing I learned not to do when it comes to CSS.
@Scratte Yes, mods are always told who the flagger was when presented with any flag. If there are multiple flaggers for the same reason, they're all listed. If there are multiple flaggers for different reasons, each reason is listed separately, along with the flagger for each. Your anonymity as a flagger does not extend to moderators. However, moderators are expected not to reveal the details of who flagged what or how.
As far as the prominence, the user name of the flagger is listed right after the flag message.
So, it's slightly less prominent since it comes second, but they're the same text size, so almost equal.
@CodyGray Yes, exactly. I find it very frustrating. Changing over to stacks has been systematically removing all information that existed in the class attributes as to what the function of an HTML element was, which makes writing userscripts much more brittle. SE has left some classes which identify an element's function, but only in places where SE is intending to access the element with JavaScript, in which case the class begins with js-.
There are good reasons that way of using CSS dropped by the wayside 20+ years ago. sigh
I don't know what shadow DOM and custom elements are
@Scratte Yes, they can. We have a tool for that on the moderator dashboard. We can write a brief message, and indicate approximate dates for our inactivity. Stepping down is a different thing: it's meant, as Nathan said, to be more permanent. Recently, it was also done more as a protest action than a vacation/sabbatical would have been.
I should also note that marking yourself as inactive doesn't really do anything but inform your fellow mods of what is going on. You can technically still log in and perform moderation tasks, and some people do, but at a much reduced volume than normal. (For example, you're going on vacation and won't have access to a computer, but you occasionally log in from your phone and handle a flag or two.)
So, there's a bit of a security risk in leaving an active account with full mod privileges that no one is using regularly. That's why staff tends to want to remove mod privileges from people who are semi-permanently inactive. It used to be no big deal at all, because you could be easily reinstated at any time you wanted with no bureaucracy. Now...there's bureaucracy.
@Makyen Indeed, it makes it very hard to design user scripts. The HTML is extremely non-semantic, and the CSS is even worse. Having a bunch of random classes that do nothing but apply a single style is so incredibly frustrating. Also, almost nothing uses IDs, so you end up with very brittle selectors. I also feel like the js- prefix is an anti-pattern.
A lot of what has been frustrating me this week though is not SE's fault. It's just JavaScript. There are too many ways to do things, and none of them are clearly any better than any other.
@CodyGray IMO, the js- classes themselves are actually OK. It's not unreasonable to have classes that are specifically intended to identify to JavaScript groups of HTML elements. Usually, it would be that the class is identifying something within the HTML, so it can be targeted by either, or both, CSS or JavaScript. If the developers find it easier in the long run to specifically identify the classes which the JavaScript is actively using by prepending a js-, that's not that bad.
Using a js- prefix could have just been something that is saying "if you're changing the HTML that has this class, then you need to look in the JavaScript and make sure you don't break anything." That's not all that unreasonable, particularly if you apply that naming scheme consistently throughout your code. It allows you to not have to check for JavaScript usage of any other classes you may want to change in the HTML.
@Makyen Why would JavaScript need unique identifiers? Seems to me like those should be merged with whatever CSS is using. The classes and/or IDs should be semantic, not simply arbitrary things created for convenience.
@Makyen I find this more convincing, though. This does make sense.
But as much as I can convince myself to forgive indiscretions with respect to code style, as long as they still work, what they've done with tooltips is just criminal.
And not only what they've done, but the way it's implemented.
The devs should really consult Stack Overflow for help...
@CodyGray Yes. I've long wondered why they don't use User Experience to ask questions about what implementation would be better from a user experience POV. They've got an entire site dedicated to answering questions about these types of issues, yet don't make use of it. Asking questions there, which are the type of questions that site exists to answer, would short-circuit a lot of the problems they've had with new features.
Yeah, the tooltips are ridiculous. Personally, I found them to be extremely annoying, so I just added CSS to disable them. I've been tempted to write CSS or JS, so there's a delay in their display similar to normal tooltips (you can get close with CSS, but really need JS to get close enough to match expectations). Having a delay wouldn't be good, but it would at least be better than always immediately displaying them.
I'm guessing that's because of the setTimeout delay, which I sometimes beat to the punch? Or maybe it's fragile in other ways, too. Not sure.
I looked at doing something to revert them myself, but given the way they were dynamically added with JS, it was over my head, difficulty-wise. I don't know why they chose to do it that way. It seems like the wrong approach, objectively speaking.
@CodyGray I'd seen that it exists, but I haven't tried it, or looked at the code. At this point, I almost never look at the voting button tooltips, so, from a personal POV, I was fine with just making sure they were never displayed (i.e. adding the CSS .votecell .s-popover { display: none; }). I'd added that CSS well before hearing that Sam had created a userscript to convert them back to normal tooltips, so didn't investigate his userscript (which is a better overall solution).
To comment on the setTimeout specifically, Id have to take a good look at the code. looks at code
Yeah, that's probably not how I would trigger doing that, but I haven't looked into what's really happening in SE's code. There are a few edge cases which could result in it failing to operate, and some where it might not operate until after the user is interacting with the page. The setTimeout is 200ms, so could be contributing to the issue.
However, I suspect that it's mostly what happens around .ajaxStop() firing, or that jQuery is not yet available when the userscript runs (happens occasionally, IME).
It used to require 50 rep to raise any sort of a flag, which was absurd. I was lowered to 15 recently, which is better. But I still think anonymous users ought to be able to raise flags, too (weighted and prioritized accordingly, of course).
@CodyGray But it's harder to construct the sentences than to read them. (Well.. unless it's from Makyen. I find I have to read those messages more than twice. :)
Tried to migrate that, but all it did was have Community apply a lock. So I tried again, and this time, I saw it was recording close votes for me. Got 3 of them recorded before it finally migrated...
@blackgreen Yes, unsalvageable in Triage is going to put it into a review queue. That one will go into the close vote review queue, since two people cast "recommend closure" flags on it. Whether you want to bring it up here is up to you. All of the posts brought up here are going to have at least one close vote or recommend-closure flag on them, as we expect the person posting it here to have done that.
Look at it this way: this room is a way to expedite closure. If there's some reason you think the question needs to be closed faster than it normally would by going through the overloaded close-vote review queue, then it's fine to post it here. Also if it's already gone through that but didn't get closed.
A very good reason for bringing it up here would be if that low-quality question had started attracting answers before it could get closed.
In case you don't know the context, the close vote review queue currently has about 5.5k questions in it awaiting review. It's not uncommon for it to have 9k or 10k questions in it. Naturally, lots of those questions don't get reviewed before they age away. This room attempts to plug that hole for egregious cases.
what really baffles me is the amount of "Requires Editing" that pop up in triage when the question is utterly uneditable... there are big misconceptions around what "Requires Editing" means, if so many people choose that as an option
I mean, I can always signal very bad reviews in the appropriate chat, but this hints to a different kind of issue. Maybe the guidelines are not readily available enough to help these reviewers clarify
So... I brought that up back in 2016 (that was prior to me being a moderator, which will make some of the statements in my question make more sense). The guidance was updated to clarify what it does actually mean, but lots of people don't bother to expand that area or read what it says. The name of the button/option remains "Requires Editing", which continues to confuse people.
"Requires Community edit" is not that much longer than "Requires Editing", but "Don't click this" is by far the best. It would also make it much easier to just auto-ban everyone clicking it :D
The button should be named edit so that the reviewer really has to put effort into it. If they don't want or can't edit it, then so will probably noone else
@CodyGray Man, that community person is a terrible reviewer (and more seriously, "Improve Edit" should not count as a good edit for suggestion ban purposes...)
I am amused that the Community user actually has a Reviews page :D
Community user is a dumping-ground for everything that gets done by user accounts that we delete. So, yeah, it's terrible at everything beyond even what you would expect for a bot.
@Lino-Votedon'tsayThanks Yeah. Agreed. But that kinda violates the spirit of Triage, which is not to do the work yourself.
@CodyGray in this case, it approves and rejects any edits done with Improve Edit or Reject & Edit
@Scratte So...technically no one clicked a button that says "Approve" or "Looks OK". They clicked "Improve Edit"...although actually, that is unambiguously wrong here.
because this edit is completely worthless, and adds zero value
@CodyGray Then maybe it will really be the best option to 1) remove the button, 2) to rename it to a mile long text: If you click this button you are sure that someone will be able to edit this question that it will be answerable, in short DON'T CLICK THIS
@CodyGray I went to a different computer the other day. I went to stack not logged in at first.. I was planning to log in. Then I changed my mind. No userscripts is a pain here.
it fixes a significant bug in the code in a post that had no other glaring issues, the fact that it was one character just means they had to change something trivial to fix a significant issue
Why leave a comment demanding someone else do it when you can just do it yourself?
It's not like there was any ambiguity. It was an obviously correct edit, and it respected the author's intent: no author of an answer intends to write incorrect or buggy code with typos.
@Scratte Oh, no. I don't want to hear another one of those stupid stories. :-(
To answer the legitimate part of that: It's not an "opportunity"; it's a "task". They can always roll back your edit if they don't like it. They do get a notice that their post has been edited.
@Daniil I do not think that is true :) But I've made a small change to my UI on the flag-summary, so I can easily see if an answer comes in on a post. If that happens, then I'm inclined to post it here before it's been in the queue for a few days.
Or if I feel that it will get answers fast.. but usually it's a losing game, since answerers are often faster than close voters.
folks I noticed a bunch of identical (rather low quality) questions about impressing some Chefina, looking for help in untangling this mess: stackoverflow.com/…
Someone flagged all those questions saying that they need to be removed because they're part of an ongoing content. Yeah, so what? Who cares? We certainly don't.
user12867493
@Scratte Then what's the point of this room then? As if people look at questions a few days old
@Daniil Usually the normal tag viewers close the question on the same day. This room is meant to handle cases when a question needs to be closed immediately or the normal process fails.
Look at it this way: this room is a way to expedite closure. If there's some reason you think the question needs to be closed faster than it normally would by going through the overloaded close-vote review queue, then it's fine to post it here. Also if it's already gone through that but didn't get closed.
No.. I can't forget. I have a user script that adds a diamond to your name. It also makes you a little fat. I just forgot how votes come about in interesting ways sometimes :)
Is a question with a suspiciously high first-day vote count relative to its view count and quality, with nothing else suspicious, worth mod-flagging as possible voting fraud?
Getting a large number of votes in a day is not enough to diagnose voting fraud. That happens normally (see: Jon Skeet). You need to find something else suspicious, like a large number of votes on a low-quality post, more votes on a question than views, etc.
@Dharman Generally speaking, nothing to do with this particular case: one of these days I'd like to pick your brain on how you spot these. I can find suspicious stuff pretty easily, but usually it's just hunches.
@Machavity I thought that was a possibility, but I concluded it was more likely to be a typo, forgetting to paste in the link, given how the message was formatted. Gotta be honest, I don't think it's a particularly funny joke to request deletion of an entire tag like that, because it makes it look like it's a legitimate request and may cause some people to go try. That's not what this room is about.
If you're going to joke, please don't make it look like an official request.
@JeanneDark We can discuss it a bit in here but that looks like it should be a 'rapid' burnination request on Meta. Others here are better informed to help you, if that's what you want.
@JeanneDark No problem. It's just that folks can sometimes get a bit too 'eager' and go off on an unofficial tag-burning spree. See this FAQ about this room.
@JeanneDark A Meta request for correcting the mis-spelt "notification" would almost certainly go down well. There's really no controversy. Have you posted much on Meta? If not, you probably don't 'get' the joke from Shree.