@Scratte I hope so, the ugly "clock" shapes, which sometimes fall down from "heaven" are nice for hanging and ringing in the churches and monasteries :)
@desertnaut That seems to have the essential musk of an answer, so I'd leave it be. Your comment is fine. I edited it to add a link to the "edit" page (which you can do easily by putting [edit] in your comment markdown).
@CodyGray This "extra boost of attention" and "expedited closure" way of thinking is also important to understand why, apropos of an earlier discussion in here, I don't see having a mod lurking in here to action requests as "wasting" others' votes.
Presumably, if you come to post your request in this room, it's because you are certain that the question needs to be closed, and it needs some extra help getting there (either because it doesn't manage to get closed through the normal review process, or because something about it is causing harm if left open).
Such requests deserve extra attention; that is the whole raison d'etre of this room.
@CodyGray: and sometimes we may be wrong, all of us being human. It helps to have someone who views this site from a different more meta-perspective involved -- a mod
Oh, absolutely. That perspective is yet another added bonus of having mods around. I was strictly referring to an earlier discussion that having a mod hammer a post closed that you had voted on kind of made it feel like your vote had been "wasted".
@cigien If you see a really bad review, you can post a link to the review in there. Samuel will look at it and in most cases suspend a reviewer from reviewing.
I think Sam runs through the transcript there once or twice a day, taking action on reported bad reviews, where appropriate, and sometimes responding to folks who appeal against review suspensions.
The problem with spam audits is that the system doesn't understand the difference between subtle spam, undisclosed affiliation and blatant spam. Some spam is deleted from actions due to users collaborating and finding evidence in charcoal. Other is removed by moderators who can see a users history. Some of it is very tricky to figure out as just one reviewer looking at a post.
@Scratte If you can see deleted posts, posts which were deleted as spam or R/A (i.e. due to re-flags, either 6 or N+ moderator) will be locked, deleted by the Community user, and the content won't be available unless you go to the revisions page.
@cigien I expect so. The only rules that doesn't apply is the 9 days close rule. This is what the Roomba Forecaster says. The duplicate rule is mentioned only in the first column.
@cigien The question was off-topic and looking for opinions/experiences. The answer was significantly biased towards the service they were promoting. In addition to the content, it uses a link to a "comparison" which exists on the site of one of the companies being "compared". Any such comparison is nearly always going to be biased in favor of the company on which the comparison is hosted, and will tend to indicate that whoever is linking to it is biased.
@cigien If you think it's useless then I have no objections. It's been here for 8 days. I expect the duplicate adequately cover the answer given on this one. Though on second thought.. it's the only duplicate on it as far as I can see. It's not the 38th.
@Makyen That makes sense, but if a question is asking for an opinion, then the answer is likely to be opinionated. The answer does seem to answer the question, biased though it is.
@Makyen I wasn't shown any. It looked like the user profile was deleted.
Huh, based on your question, it seems you can see the original username?
@Makyen Ah, ok. I usually use the username to see if there's any relationship to the link. But a deleted profile says even more I guess. I didn't think of it that way, thanks.
@Makyen Cool. It seems like there's very little y'all can't see. I shudder to think of all the crap you must see all the time.
I've reviewed a post from a deleted user, that turned out to not be an audit, so it's not clear cut :) But in First Posts and Late Answers it's not uncommon for the poster to be "deleted" and the post posted "2 hours ago"
@cigien The user had to become deleted somehow. They either chose to have their account deleted or it was deleted or destroyed by a moderator. Obviously, for the latter, there's usually a really good reason for that to happen. :;
@cigien Yes. Basically, with the username it could be clearly determined that there was undisclosed affiliation. With information available to moderators, it was quite clear that the question was a spam seed and the answer was the spam which the question was posted in order to show.
@Scratte Why? What's displayed in the review queue could be adjusted to whatever is desired. It would also be possible for the review system to just not include a post as an audit if the username wasn't available (i.e. the user was deleted/destroyed), or just not use the post in a review where the user would need to have been deleted too soon (i.e. not for first posts/late answers). It's probably an unforeseen consequence of the change to requiring the 24 hour delay prior to self-delete.
@AdrianMole BTW as you suggested, I looked through my Qs and As to see if any had been used as audits. I don't know what the rates generally are, but about a quarter of my Qs have been used as audits, which feels nice.
@Makyen I meant the deleted user and posted "2 hours ago". If it takes 24 hours to delete an account with a post, then that's just not possible as a real review. Then it can only be an audit.
@cigien Debatable. It's trivially detectable as spam by just opening the post in another tab and there are hints in what is shown in the review that there are issues which need further investigation, which implies that you should try opening it in a new tab to get more context.
@Scratte Yes, that looks like it would be one way to determine that it is likely an audit. OTOH, it is possible for a profile to have been deleted by a moderator, so it is possible for it to end up in that state.
@Makyen One learns to spot those things after a while :) And open the post up in a different tab. I guess it mostly catches new reviewers. (Or Adrian :-)
@cigien It's not. You legitimately have no way to know. That was spam because a moderator nuked it as part of a spam wave. In the review audit, you can't see any of the other posts by the same user that comprised the wave, so you're flying totally blind. That's a terrible audit, and it should be removed from the system.
@CodyGray Now I'm getting conflicting advice, Makyen said debatable. Y'all should all consult with each other before giving advice ;) I do agree that it seems like it would trip reviewers up without teaching anything useful. The deleted user profile is quite a red flag though.
@cigien While I understand where Makyen is coming from, and I do agree that you should have been able to pass the audit based on the amount of information that was available (which, you did), I also disagree that it's a good audit. As mentioned before, audits should be obvious. That one wasn't. It looked like it might be an answer. And, were it not an audit, we wouldn't want you just spam-flagging posts that aren't clearly spam.
@CodyGray Hmm, fair enough. I'll need to see more audits in the queues before I have a sense of what the right thing is for audits to be teaching.
@CodyGray Re one of your previous comments, I do see that the benefits of having a mod in the room are considerable and outweigh my concerns about "wasted" votes. At the moment it's only rational agreement I'll admit, I still feel bad about it. I'll work on that though.
@AdrianMole Does the system actually do that? That's very sneaky.
@CodyGray Ah, I see. That was ambiguous. I meant I feel bad for my feelings not matching up with what I know is right. Hardly uncommon, feelings always lag behind, and often don't catch up.
@CodyGray - Although, I've found it interesting sometimes to apply feelings in logical domains. Lagged information forces longer periods of needing to keep your mind open. And context overload / confusion can lead to novel solutions. Although I guess maybe you can just get drunk or something to do that too.
@Scratte I may (neither confirming nor denying) have been review suspended, once, for reviewing while drunk but, if so, I didn't realize until I was sober.
Huh, when did the Graveyard come into existence? (First message says 2013 Nov 30 but that can't be true; must be one of the first SOCVR chats being moved into it.)
It's a way to keep the transcript in here clean, both for userscripts and for human eyes that want to check what they've missed, but without actually deleting the messages (since, (A) ROs don't have delete privileges in chat, and (B) we want them visible for transparency).
Oh, very nice. I remember stepping in here several years ago and chat was just, unreadable, either due to bots or everyone was being so meta / issuing commands here like a terminal, I couldn't tell if they were bots :)
Yeah, the bots have mostly been kicked out of here into other specialized rooms, like SOBotics. The only bot we have running now is MetaSmoke, and that only when it's relatively certain that the notification is a true positive.
And once upon a time, someone (possibly Shog or Animuson?) got tired of all the bellyaching about deletion of old questions causing loss of muh precious repz.
@CodyGray I akways found delight in collapsing them (-: like this) but that became harder when I started to write my smileys the wrong way around to prevent atrocious software from turning them into emojis behind my back
Skype is particularly pesky, you can turn them off for yourself but everyone else will still see a coffee cup if you write (c) as in what comes after (a) and (b)
ten foot pole but I can't escape using Teams at work (only in the browser as a rule, a dedicated browser which I let crash when it wants to)
no, I have colleagues in Poland and Malaysia who have things set up in their local language, and then in Teams (like in email) I see their localized variant of "on Friday, tripleee wrote:" etc, sometimes in tiny 4-point italics
Ah. I've never used Teams. I have a co-worker who has used it to collaborate with other companies. She has had a very bad experience, but has chalked it up to being incompatibilities with her Mac.
@tripleee That's just the "joys" of HTML email. Most clients I see do that.
Lacking voice/video integration is something I've come to regard as a feature in conferencing clients. The number of times I need to see someone's face during a conference call is very low.
And the number of times they need to see my face is even lower.
@CodyGray I have to run Teams when I want to see somebody present, but I quit immediately (and still I have my machine reboot as if it thinks it's a Windows machine)
@CodyGray it's probably possible for some scenarios, but being able to open my mic to comment when I need to is not supported in any browser scenario I'm aware of
another "feature" of Teams is that there are different types of conferences where some features are unavailable, you have to know when you send the invitation that you have to select the type of event, and some like "live presentation" turn off e.g. the ability to have a chat side channel
@CodyGray I've done that a few times but the low fidelity of phone audio and the trouble of having the thing going on two separate devices is not worth the hassle
don't get me started on Microsoft's (lack of) competence with audio, though it has gotten a lot better
But...despite a little hint of "searching for a library", that doesn't really seem to be a resource request. It looks like they're just looking for a solution to the problem they describe.
@cigien When posts are nuked with red flags (spam or rude/abusive), Community is shown as the deleter, not a specific user. A moderator can see who cast red flags on the post (and thus indirectly brought about its deletion), but regular users cannot see this information.
@cigien Yeah, each red flag casts an implicit downvotes. Normally, it takes 6 red flags to reach the deletion threshold. But red flags from a moderator immediately reach the threshold. I nuked them. :-)
@cigien Were you angry that they weren't more heavily downvoted? The downvotes don't do much. Having a post nuked for spam/offensive has far more severe consequences than a handful of downvotes. (Also note that I destroyed the user account, so... yeah.)
I struggle with what to do with troubleshooting questions like this where a user is struggling to achieve a result due to various mistakes like (according to the answer the OP thanked, which I haven't verified) an incorrect orientation, things being in the wrong spot, and a missing weight. I really struggle to imagine this ever helping anyone in the future, but it has an MCVE. small problem with card view design android studio
@cigien My use of "angry" there was tongue-in-cheek. A better choice might have been "concerned". Confusion is of no cause for concern. I'm surprised you haven't seen it before. I usually one-click nuke SD reports of true spam whenever I'm around.
@mickmackusa Well, um, downvoters aren't supposed to leave comments, so that's kind of an unfair interpretation. Furthermore, you are a bit biased to assess the informativeness and correctness of your own answer. I wouldn't know either, since I don't know anything about PHP, but it seems unreasonable to dismiss the opinions of 4 users as "attacks". Everyone is entitled to an opinion.
Maybe I'm missing something, but I do think -4 seems kind of... odd @mickmackusa, having read your answer. Did you receive all the downvotes all at once? Or, over time?
@CodyGray this is why I am asking around -- to try to draw some sort of intelligent reason why a post that adds value to a page should have a -4 tally. Must be my winning personality.
@mickmackusa If I had to come up with the best argument I could for downvoting that post, it's kind of hard to follow: one needs to read the entire code and match the printouts to the solutions. Also, the solution you recommend is "remove the first word only if there are multiple words", which is arguably not what the OP asked for.
Personally I wouldn't downvote that, but I'm just guessing why someone might.
@mickmackusa I wouldn't have downvoted for this reason, but the only thing I can think of is, that the asker and question is clearly of such a beginner context that, your answer is hard to connect. I'm a seasoned programmer and it took me a second to understand your point, and the point seemed kind of far from the asker's interest. Still, -4 is weird. Maybe just bandwagoning.
@RyanM said it better, ignore me.
@mickmackusa - I've read some of your other answers though and you write some really thorough and helpful answers. Winning personality in my book :-) Chalk this up as a strange blip in the universe.
Every day in LA is the same: I get an audit that I already flagged back when it was originally posted, and I catch someone plagiarizing the code from another answer to post their own, unformatted code-only answer (third day in a row). Am I actually supposed to detect plagiarism in LA (or FP)?
Of note, when it was first brought up in here, I deleted a couple of rant-y comments about downvotes that mickmackusa had left underneath that post. Any of those comments alone would have been sufficient to motivate me to downvote it.
@JeanneDark Unformatted, code-only answers should have something done with them in review, whether plagiarized or not. Answers that look too good to be true should also be suspected of plagiarism, and you should do at least a cursory check. I have no idea why you're getting audits that you already flagged. That seems like a serious bug. Have you reported it yet?
@CodyGray Re plagiarized answers: I custom flag them (this one's pending, the earlier ones were marked helpful and posts deleted). Re audits: No, I didn't do anything about it except for complaining in here ;)
I've also had reviews (LA or LQP - not sure) on posts that I've already flagged as NAA. I know one was an audit and one other I mentioned in here (long time ago) ... can't remember if that was an audit, though. Either way, I don't think I should be seeing posts in review (audit or not) that I've already flagged.
... in fact, I think the one I mentioned here was not an audit. Someone (vaguely squirrel-like) suggested I do something outside the review, then go back and refresh. That allowed me to click "I'm done."
@CodyGray then I would say that your criteria for downvotes urgently needs to be recalibrated. Downvotes on a post are not earned by the quality/relevance of comments under a post. That is just grumpy behavior that does not correlate to good content curation. If there are irrelevant comments, then the correct action is to flag them for removal and nothing more. Downvoting a post for a comment that is later removed will only confuse researchers.
@AdrianMole I've got such audits already when I reviewed for the first time. Maybe I just flag too much and so there are barely enough audits left for me ;)
Of course, you can post on MSO and then, if a mod or CM feels that it's better suited as a network-wide issue/report, they can migrate it to MSE. You'll then get all your existing upvotes transferred with that.
Hmm, it never got any reviews. It was just flagged by one of our own (and another newer user) and deleted by a mod. Weird. Foils my plan to hand out review bans suspensions.
@CodyGray fair enough, it's more the way they asked using multiple unrelated tags, suggesting they don't mind having a solution in one or the other, wreaks of a "just give me the code" question.
Yeah, I get how the multiple tags was throwing off the scent. But... it's the same answer either way, so the scripting language difference isn't material.