Voting fraud has always been a fact of life on Stack Overflow, and moderators have been cleaning it up since the dawn of time. It's a big part of the job.
Well, I'm too tired/lazy to write up any evidence for this one, but it's so blatant that it's not necessary...so y'all are getting "Voting fraud: " followed by a bunch of account links.
That should be sufficient. We probably don't even need the account links, but I don't want to be blamed for enabling your criminally lazy behavior. :-)
@JeanneDark I have mixed feelings on questions like that... on the one hand, it's a specific question within the scope of software development... On the other hand, the answer is almost certainly "no, not unless you built that functionality in ahead of time"
Which is, I suppose, an answer. But I'm not an iOS expert, so that's mostly speculation.
@desertnaut I looked at that, but I just wasn't sure enough to pull the trigger. It looks like they're asking about implementing it in terms of code, which should be on-topic here.
@Scratte It doesn't imply that at all. It implies that most questions can be answered with sufficient research and without needing SO, but not all. "After you have reached the end of your rope with the pain of not having the answer, that's when you can go ahead and ask."
@desertnaut The accepted answer. It implies to me that if you cannot solve it yourself, then you're doing it wrong. You didn't search enough or you didn't troubleshoot the right way. And unless you've tried every possible way, you shouldn't ask. That only leaves unanswerable Questions.
A bunch of my answers are "nope, you can't do that, not possible." (with more explanation/citations, obviously)
@Scratte I specifically wrote in the question "I tried all answers on Stack Overflow and none of them worked"! I don't know how much clearer I could be.
@CodyGray I don't see it that way. It says "Read blogs" and "Find books" and "Search. Like mad" and "Troubleshoot".. The last one implies try, try and try again. At one point you will be the expect and only then should you ask your impossible to answer Question.
But more seriously, I don't really mind the basic questions...I'll take a basic question over yet another "plz debug my nullpointerexception in this specific situation" question.
@Scratte Like Jon did here? I see there that he consulted at least one book (well, it was his own, but I think that still counts?), did some other research, ran some benchmarks, etc.
@desertnaut I can't vote to close and am not the most experienced user in here, but I tend to agree with you. It has code, but it seems to me that it ultimately is not about programming, but the maths behind (no error in the code, no problems coding).
@Scratte Yeah, I am in agreement with you here. My philosophy is in line with Shog's, that the effort should be in clearly defining the problem...as long as it's not a "debug my code to find the bug in my specific code" question. For those, yeah, put in some effort into learning how to debug code.
I don't really care how clearly defined the 5768th NullPointerException question from someone who forgot to initialize their variable and can't be bothered to actually debug and says the canonical isn't a dupe because they don't understand it: there's zero lasting value to these questions.
@RyanM Yes. Some of my reputation are from lazy-like-debug Questions. Or perhaps from users that just don't even know how to debug. I don't find them useful for the repository, unless they some with the error code in the title and they're isolated to just one error.
@Scratte I think more than 80% of the answerable questions here are actually RTFM + some experimentation. Heck, I managed to learn (Py)Spark myself (practically from scratch) by actually trying to answer such questions here (and ended-up with a silver badge)...
When I had to ask this question, I had exhausted literally all available means - and it proved that the Pyro people had changed something but... forgot to update their documentation
I came across this question which looks like a Google support question, but the OP writes "... I have sent email to the Google action support for help but they ask me to come here to ask for assistance."
Not sure if I should have just flagged ^^ as R/A or mod-flagged but I'm not clickling a link that says "click here to get your solution" and links to anonymousfiles.io to find out what it is.
At first, I thought this question is too broad, but could it be on-topic if rephrased to something like: «how to bybass buggy client-side JS implementation of ReCaptcha»?
@RyanM Yes, but a duplicate was closed for «general software».
@DontKnowMuchButGettingBetter Why? Bad question, but «needs more focus»? I don’t do Android programming, but Cocoa has a very specific solution to this exact question, for Swift and Objective-C.
@Dharman See my message about the new timeline. I don't have time to bring the UI back from continuously worse all the time. I'm done.. no more reviews.
@DanielWiddis It does, but I can only select one reason. If you want to close with a custom reason be my guest, but either way both of them need clarity.
Non-English posts are primarily unclear and off-topic. Whichever reason you pick will be alright.
@AnnZen FYI we are should not translate questions instead of OP. We need them to do this. I rolled back your edit.
I shouldn't have looked at battery - If any Android person wanted to find one of the older posts and add a canonical answer about how to calculate battery levels, current, usage, state, etc., you could close 400 other questions as duplicates.
@Braiam Just as well I was already out of close votes - there's a bunch of general computing in there, as well but they are outnumbered by actual Android questions about battery monitoring. Always makes me wonder why there are such generic tags as battery in the first place.
A mod replaced goober with fool. What kind of edit is that? That post is typo. Should be closed and deleted altogether. That edit is seriously flawed. I don't think it's ok to change the bad word. That edit basically says: No, you're not a goober. IMHO, you're a fool. :|
@Dharman As with any time you need to flag, but don't have a specific post: pick a post, really any post, but one of your own is usually considered most appropriate.
@AdrianMole I think "lazy" is specifically mentioned in the Code of Conduct. "Focus on the content, not the person. This includes terms that feel personal even when they're applied to content (e.g. “lazy”)."
@CodyGray It used to look like this. Now it looks like that. Cramped up and multiple "red" events are harder to tell apart. Like does the "Edit x 1" belong to the line above or below it?
If moderators are routinely deleting perfectly fine comments, like Dharman’s canned one, shouldn’t you all have a discussion about that in the moderator chat?
@CodyGray No, that’s obvious. So this means there are moderators that actually think Dharman’s canned comment is unfriendly, even after having heard counter argumenra.
@CodyGray Thank you. I didn't have time to be useful on Stack today. I was busy reverting CSS disasters ;) A post on meta, you say?.. I'll think about it, since I expect I need to actually write something useful too.
@Scratte It doesn't have to be a whole lot more than what you wrote in here...
Your original complaint, how this demotivates you and makes you want to stop reviewing, pointing out the specific change, showing screenshots...
@Dharman Maybe, sorta kinda, but seems like it could be improved by editing. Just put more of the person's comment into the answer.
I don't see how deleting it is going to help. It will just leave that question unanswered, and someone else will later have to come along and expand the comment(s) into an answer.
@CodyGray I can't mention how it demotivated review, since there will just turn out be a long list of people telling me I don't need to look at the timeline ;)
@Scratte Make it general: constant changes like this, many of which introduce UI/UX regressions, are really beginning to suppress my motivation to continue participating...
@AdrianMole They recently made a moderator-only page/tool look nicer and be responsive. So, yes, not all UI/UX changes are bad. Some are nice. Others are... not. If only there was a way to tell the difference. Maybe like... and stop me if you've heard this before... get a couple of people together to like, check it out... review it... test it before it is rolled out.
@Andreas My rants don't usually have consequences, thank goodness.
I know it doesn't.. I did post a fix for low-reputation users to the flag dialog, but I do not think anyone will find it.. and there's a post about it, but no changes to it. No putting the back to the right side.
Narrator: With the moderator election having been lost, Dharman realized his only option was to create two sockpuppets and earn the right to single-handedly close all the bad PHP questions.
@CodyGray Just FYI: ignore in this case was not needed, nor was it effective. The post was reported because the user was on the user blacklist, not for an inherent property of the post. Thus, there's no reason to ignore this particular post. Just fp feedback would remove the user from the user blacklist, and the post would not be reported again. In general, we don't ignore posts unless they have content which is going to be detected again, and it has been detected more than once.
On occasion, we do preemptively ignore, but rarely.