@Shree I am not saying that they are not eligible, but Makyen said that name recognition plays a role. Maybe I have not been active as long as Travis, but I rather think I got 4th place because I had a lower score than Travis. Not because my name was not recognizable enough. I could be very wrong though.
@Dharman It's worth noting that despite not coming in third, you did beat someone with a higher candidate score than you. You placed well in a field with excellent candidates.
@Dharman It's not that you haven't been active on SO or MSO. The first time that the significant majority of voters see anything about a candidate is when they go to the election page. Just running in a prior election makes your username more familiar to them the next time.
@Makyen @Machavity How many accounts have you nuked already? Are you overwhelmed with the flags? What are your feelings so far after the first hour as mods?
@Dharman ** Makyen said that name recognition plays a role.** , You are wrong. Name , Rep all are virtual. Please , maintain your standers and If you support site keep going. Seee this old post when maken lost. chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/47123702#47123702
@Makyen Nothing is ever deleted.. so I assume it's just a question of linking the stuff back. I know a user that got all their posts linked to their new account. I don't know about comments and chat messages though.
@Scratte Yes, I'd assume it's easier than going to backups, but backups are a failsafe, which is the final arbiter of "can it be done" wrt. going back to a previous state.
lol! You are right, sort of.. I could accidentally slip and fall on my laptop.. gliding my nose on the touchpad with all the right combinations to delete my own profile.
@Shree That's not the rule. It's no moderator pings for moderator work, no?
I'm pretty sure I'd get a lot more flags declined if I sent flags for half the stuff I've said in messages that ping Cody... especially if I sent this one
I'm pretty sure the ROs would eventually scold someone who frequently pinged anyone over issues that could be handled with a flag...it's just that most of us can't singlehandedly do anything about most flaggable stuff, so no one pings us about it :-)
Can I make a petition to ask mods to put in the helpful message when they escalate something to CMs. I am noticed someone handled my flag about a voting ring 2 hours ago, but most accounts are still not deleted or suspended.
For users like us it would really help to know what happened to our flag and why the accounts are not dealt with. When checking this I noticed another account in the ring that I hadn't flagged in the message and I wonder whether it was because I didn't include it or if there was something else
@RyanM Fair enough. Lets hope they start a new election in 6 months time. If the reason why we can't elect more than 2 moderators at a time is that they need training, I think it's probably a good idea to just have elections as soon as possible.
I don't see how it would have helped to have some annotation that it has been escalated to CMs. You'd still be wondering if that account you found was part of the ring or not.
@CodyGray It would also be helpful for migrations... I have flagged 3 old questions for migration. Two marked helpful with no apparent action, one declined. I have no idea if they were escalated to CMs or if the moderator just felt nice about not declining my flag because I would've had a good point on a newer question.
I decided to filter just to a single category (duplicates) and started reviewing those. Then got one that wasn't a duplicate, went "huh". Handled it and got "This is just a test"....
It's mostly not about being unsure. When we escalate to CMs is when the multiple accounts are legitimate (i.e., belong to actual people), but the crossvoting is still suspicious and needs to be invalidated.
@RyanM Those are never escalated to CMs. A mod was just being nice.
That is why I decline them. I even have a nice canned message for it.
Accurate feedback will always be the best way to go in my opinion. If I don't know that what I did has any use, it's not really making me happy to do it. Then it'll just feel like busywork.
@CodyGray In my particular case.. yes :) But not everyone is weird and obsessive about their statistics, as I am. But to be completely honest, I will own it if it was rightfully declined. What sets me off is an "oops" that will stay on my record or a decline for an unreasonable reason. I am just as miffed about a helpful flag that should have been declined as a declined one that should have been helpful :)
I mean, I get the whole thing, I surely do. I will point out, it's not just an "oops", though. There's a difference of opinion about whether mods should decline flags that they didn't handle, or whether they should only decline flags when they were raised in bad faith.
I, at least, do read feedback on helpful flags - I got one that said "You can close posts by the same author as duplicates. In future please do that instead of flagging, unless there is a broader pattern of question repetition." once, which helped direct my future flagging to be more accurate.
Not sure we're talking about the same script-incident. I was referring to the one where all flags were marked declined in one go.. later a developer restored them
@Dharman Yes, sorta. If a user is posting a large number of low-quality questions, you can flag and ask a moderator to reach out to them about that. We have a canned template for it.
But make it clear that's what you want, that you're not just whining
Answers that are actually questions get NAA flags. But what are we supposed to do about a question that is an answer? There used to be a "Not a real question" close reason.
That is even odd'er.. since I was also under the impression that a Question that only has the regex tag should be closed for not specifying the engine.
So a few hours ago I ran into some behavior in the UI that was weird but reproducible and I suspect intentional (for some reason): I was looking at a user’s reputation history and noticed that several of their recent answers has -1 scores, and in looking at the answers, they seemed like good answers, so I was curious about the scores. The weird thing is, that when I clicked the score to show the upvote/downvote totals, they were both zero.
I am not sure if this is how it has always been or if it is a bug, but yeah votes and total tallies are separate. Totals are cached and not refreshed automatically by the system when votes are invalidated
Question. I'm on the "low quality answers" queue. A user had a problem, then solved it themsleves, posting an answer with links to other SO questions that helped them solve it. So while the answer that I'm reviewing "Looks OK" I really think the original question should be closed. Is there a protocol for that?
@DanielWiddis Doesn't sound like the answer looks OK, either. If it's just links to other SO questions, then it is essentially a link-only answer. It should be deleted, and the question should be closed as a duplicate.
But more generally, yes, the protocol is to open up the post in a new window (click the "link" link in the review queue) and handle the question as you normally would.
After thinking about this review task more, I wonder how others would have handled it. stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/26742933 I just edited out the questionable language to leave a poor quality answer.
@IanCampbell it was already closed as a typo, which is correct, so I just nuked the whole thing. Unfortunately, reviews can't do that. Huge flaw in review, IMHO.
@CodyGray I cannot know :) I do not quality control moderators.. and I cannot know the quality of a moderator that has never moderated as a moderator ;)
Now see, that's the kind of emails that should go out from The Company. "Hi, Ian, we noticed that you visited the site a few times last week and answered 25 questions. We wanted to congratulate you on not getting banned or suspended. Keep up the good work!"
Isn't it a bit harsh to upright delete such new questions, or is the poster still able to view their own post? I've had a question deleted by (I assume) the Roomba, once, back in the days, with no possibility to even see that the question ever existed.
Just got an idea. How about that for maybe one hour or so after you have posted a question, then when there's any activities (comments or answers) you are expected to at least acknowledge that somehow. And if you fail to do it within 5 minutes, then the question gets autoclosed
@klutt Eh, no, absolutely not. You're supposed to stare at your own question for an hour? After 30 minutes, something urgent happens outside, you walk out, somebody leaves a comment, and you return after 15 minutes. Woops.
@klutt You mean posting a Question should be like calling a service desk? Where you must stay on the line even if you're probably customer number 5498?
@Scratte IMO I think it's very rude to quickly post a question, go to bed or whatever, and then come back a few hours laters to see if there are any answers.
@klutt There's an infinite set of reasons why a question asker would leave. They cannot guard themselves against not leaving. That is not possible. You cannot know why they left, either.
@klutt I don't think so. I could have posted something really wrong and then gotten 5 messages about how wrong I am. 2 being from the Low Quality Posts queue :)
@Andreas Yes, of course there can be quite a lot of good reasons that you have to leave suddenly. I'm talking about those cases where you know in beforehand.
If some needs an Answer fast and is busy waiting for me to clarify or edit it, then tough luck. Same with Questions.. though busy waiting for clarification so that one can answer it just doesn't make sense.
@Andreas The system would not need to know the difference. You could just be told that you're expected to be around approx 30 minutes or so for follow up questions. If your house gets on fire or your wife needs immediate medical care, then of course you just leave your computer. A closed question is a pretty small pay to pay in that situation.
@klutt Pretty small pay in that situation, but sometimes, notifications don't get through, a family member suddenly turns angry, somebody hurts themselves on the street, and you want to see if there's a need for help, etc...
We can update the ask question UI to have a check box. "Are you experiencing any chest pain currently? Are you using any cocaine?" If the answer is yes to either question, please consider deferring asking.
I just don't see why it's necessary. If more information is needed that the person is not replying with, then the question will get closed due to people casting close votes. If the person is not replying, but no more information is needed because the question was well-posed in the first place, then it doesn't need to be and shouldn't be closed.
And I personally find it quite rude (apart from good reasons to do so) when someone posts a question and I ask for some specific clarification but OP just don't respond.
@Andreas Well, once I had to go to lunch 15 minutes after I posted a question, and I wrote that in a comment and apologized. I also wrote when I expected to be back, and instantly posted a new comment when I was available again. I never see anyone doing that.
Yeah, that's a lot of noise. Not really what comments are meant for. With the exception of chat (and even to some extent here), this is an asynchronous platform.