@cigien Those sound like they are mostly just giving credit to the work that came before. Giving such credit is generally a good thing. In some circles, particularly academia, it's definitely required. It's desired here, but if it's required would depend on the specifics (mostly as to if the new post would be considered a derivative work). In general, it's not something I'd encourage people to remove.
@Makyen True, even if there's more than one way, and they're vastly different, there's rarely half a dozen truly different ways of writing a few lines of code :) The C++ comment was mostly tongue-in-cheek :)
@Makyen Yeah, I'm in academia myself, and we're very strict about that. I kind of thought it's a lot more lax in the programming world, and I fear I've just overestimated how lax it is. Agreed, I won't do that any more.
@Scratte Yeah, I'm just not going to do that any more.
@Makyen That option seems reasonable as well. I'm not too worried really. This kind of situation doesn't occur nearly often enough for there to be even an appearance of a pattern of impropriety. Still, no harm hedging my bets I suppose. Thanks :)
@Scratte Yeah, needing to link to the actual license from an SE page is debatable. If SE had an actual link in the page to the license, then I'd say that would be sufficient. However, the link which SE provides is actually a link to a page of links to the licenses. I think that probably complies with the spirit of the license, but I'm unsure if it complies with the actual wording.
@Makyen I see. So we could potentially all be doing it wrong.. that's a little disturbing. I'm not sure if I should change my approach though, as I think it would kind of seem like noise or fluff, if I did.
I see what they did. They can't link to 4.0, since not all is 4.0..
@Makyen If I may, the Answer to the license post that you made, is a very good read. I remember having read it before. I think you also wrote another one, perhaps on meta.stackexchange, that was also very thorough about licensing and the change from 3.0 to 4.0.
@Scratte Thank you. Yes, the other answer you're thinking about is an answer I wrote to "Stack Exchange and Stack Overflow have moved to CC BY-SA 4.0", which basically says that what they did at that time wasn't appropriate and that to resolve the situation they created by changing the license in the TOS, they would need to implement basically what they eventually implemented wrt. disclosing and handling the licensing of different content.
There are some corner cases which I think could still use some work, but what they've ended up with seems largely in compliance with the licenses, which is a really good thing. At a minimum, it is dramatically better than what they were doing at the time I wrote that.
@cigien Thanks. Answering questions is normally no problem. There are times when I'm doing other things, so responses may be delayed, but I'm happy to help when/where I can.
@Makyen That's perfect. My questions are never urgent. I'd much rather have a well-written, thoughtful response a day, or two, or even later, rather than an immediate incomplete one :)
@cigien Sometimes you can search chat and find an answer already :) Chat search does have it's limits though and having been part of the conversation helps a lot.
I seem to have a better memory for stuff like that than for technical things like proper syntax :D
@cigien Not very long. I joined the room on the day of my first reviews, as I wasn't sure what I was doing and I wanted to know how worried I should be if I made the wrong choice in one. Then.. I get review suspended for one of them, and I figured I had better pick up some pointers :)
I can see that I must have first visited the room on January 28th.
@Scratte Ha, I should have done that myself. As soon as I got privileges to access review queues, I started using them, and then a short while later I got a 3 week suspension. I found the suspension reason rather unfair, and went on meta to see if I could find an explanation. Turns out, I was misusing the triage queue, and I was not the only one. I actually haven't touched triage after that :( I should probably get back to it at some point.
If I'd known of this room then, I'd have come here earlier :)
@cigien Mine was only 4 days. But I remember spending a lot of time reading all the posts about reviewing. And all the posts linked from those. And I ended up only reading meta posts for a very long time. I figured Late Answers were a little more easy since the rules on "Not an Answer" are much fewer. I only recently went back to Triage after having doing First Posts for a while.
My Answer rate dropped significantly though. Reading meta posts and doing reviews took up my time.. so, relatively, I gained more reputation the first two weeks of my account, than ever since.
@Scratte I prefer learning from mistakes, and breaking things, it sticks much better :) I wasn't annoyed by the suspension per se, but I thought it escalated, so starting at 3 weeks was the annoying bit :( But at least I learned from it, I haven't been suspended since :)
@cigien I do not think you started at three weeks :) The default is 4 days, and doubles every time. So 8, then 16, then 32.. and perhaps you only found out about it 11 days into that one. I think you can ask if you want to know for sure though.
@cigien I was just very confused. So I didn't understand what was wrong with the review. It's hard to learn if you don't know what is wrong, no? :) That's why I stayed in here.
I had my answer but the question was so unclear that I still don't know what the issue was.
There is now an accepted answer that I don't agree with and it is accepted for reasons unknown. I don't know why I bothered writing an answer to this question
@Machavity Yeah, I see that message pinned :) I might try triage again now. Say, you're a mod, would it be too much trouble to check the time span of that suspension? I distinctly remember it being about 3 weeks.
@Dharman Aah, I see. I didn't see your deleted answer. That cv-pls reason is confusing though, it doesn't have anything to do with the close reason.
@cigien "Additional factual information in the request reason is fine, particularly when it's there to help other users save time when evaluating the post, or to help them make the choice to click-through to the question/answer."
Given that it lead to a prolonged discussion my information was not clear, which is often the problem with me. I think people have the context of my thoughts but for some reason people don't know what I am thinking at any given moment.
@Dharman There's a nice very answer there. The question doesn't seem to be salvageable at first glance, but maybe that answer should be kept around somehow?
I don't think this answer is even possible to be found in a normal way. Even if someone finds that answer which link are they looking for? You don't have to vote if you are unsure, and if nobody else agrees then it's ok making my vote the lone vote on that question in eternity.
@Scratte Yeah, sites like that are a pain. I don't know about other languages, but for C++, they're terrible. Take a look at the very first tutorial, it starts off with using namespace std; :(
@cigien I tried out their Java one and found several errors. I didn't even know a lot of Java back then. I contacted them with the information and never heard from them and as far as I know, the errors are still there! :)