@SmokeDetector still not sure about this one, they posted a spammy-looking NAA twice on this question but it really looks like they are trying to ask how to apply the solution to their site
@Makyen Why did SD get noisier in here? I see it's now reporting feedback and autoflag information in separate chat messages (now moved to Graveyard). Did some settings get lost in a reboot?
@CodyGray SD posts messages about FP feedback on autoflagged posts into the rooms the post would have been reported into. For most SO posts, that includes here. The intent is to actually get the message/ping to the users whose accounts were used, so they can take a look to see if they want to retract their atuo-flag.
I'm not sure why it was posted 3 times. The only thing I know of which would cause that is if someone changed their feedback more than once (e.g. did FP, then changed to TP, then another FP came in). Having it happen twice could be from someone giving NAA feedback and another person giving FP feedback on the autoflagged post. However, the post ended up with 3 TP and an NAA, so some feedback was changed.
I can confirm that feedback was changed on that post multiple times. There was some debate as to what feedback was appropriate for that post, and so there was a NAA that was changed to TP and then I think back to NAA again. I don't know why it was reported here, if as you say, it's usually only reported in Charcoal HQ.
In my opinion, spam overrules R/A. If it's spam, then it's spam. If it's not spam, then look to see if it's R/A. I'd say that was spam due to the spammy link.
@Makyen OK, I guess I have just missed any occurrences. Your explanation makes sense. I thought I was seeing the same kind of noisy feedback that always gets posted in CHQ, notifying when the first feedback is submitted for all posts.
@cigien Thanks for the notice; I'll try and pick up the slack, then.
@cigien No... I just see deleted messages, and I'd already started typing that response, so I went ahead and submitted it anyway.
@cigien In this case I wouldn't have deleted the message. I did so because with the post in question having been deleted (and therefore the SD report disappearing), my question about which flag to raise lacked context and I didn't want to waste someone's time answering it.
@CodyGray Yeah, some people like those, others feel they are just noise. Given that they now are posted by a different user, metasmoke, you can just hide the posts from the user, or ignore the user everywhere. That user doesn't do anything other than post those feedback messages, so that's all you'll miss.
@JeanneDark Yeah, that's reasonable. I prefer messages not being removed, so as to keep track of stuff in the transcript, but in this case, as you point out, there was nothing to be lost by removing it. Of course, Cody had to come and answer it anyway, but so it goes ;)
@cigien I only do so if it's short or was never meant to be posted and I believe no one saw it. It goes without saying that these messages receive the most attention. Mods know and see everything anyway.
@CodyGray It posts a message whenever a feedback type which wasn't previously on the report is added to the report. Thus, you might get one of those messages for each of TP, NAA, and FP on the same report.
@CodyGray No, those are posted by SmokeDetector. The only thing the metasmoke user posts are the feedback messages. If you go back a couple/few months, then everything is posted by SmokeDetector, but the metasmoke user is currently only posting the feedback messages.
Oh, I see. Well, looking at the actual transcript instead of relying on my own faulty memory, metasmoke does post other status announcements, like when a reboot is occurring. But, yes, it seems SD does post the confirmation about changes as well as reports that blacklists have been reloaded. I'm sure there's a pattern in there somewhere, but it isn't obvious to me.
@CodyGray Yes. It posts a message when it, itself, reboots (it's actually a separate instance of SD that doesn't do anything other than receive those messages from MS and post them), but if you're ignoring the feedback, then those reboot messages don't really matter. When someone gets the time to integrate using more than one chat user into SD, then it won't even post reboot messages, because it will be in the same instance/code as the active SD instance.
The tag implicit-cast doesn't make sense in most programming languages - the tag name itself is a misconception. As correctly stated in the tag wiki:
In C and C++, there is no such thing as an implicit cast. There are implicit and explicit conversions; a cast is explicit by definition. Consider ...
Sometimes mods miss some questions like this one, and it is never deleted. I always assumed that the accept vote is removed as well, not reassigned to the community user.
I'm not sure how that happened. It looks like a bug, but I am not sure.
According to the moderator cheat sheet, it's staff that invalidates votes @Dharman, so they made a mistake or they made a mistake or the moderator made a mistake or it isn't sock puppetry.
@desertnaut "I could write a client/server service application that could handle the automatic connection, negotiation and playback, but I was wondering whether there are any options that are supported by each OS that I could trigger remotely."
@desertnaut Admittedly, it's a bad question I'm not debating that, just think the close reason isn't right.
@Braiam " You can also just delete users that were clearly created only to upvote another user, instead of contacting the community team. Make sure to use the sockpuppet deletion reason." When it is an obvious sock-puppetry like the one I mentioned mods can delete accounts themselves. Usually, there is no approval needed from employees. I doubt that this case was escalated to employees, all votes were undone when the account was deleted with the exception of that one acceptance vote.
A mod handling this might have missed the question and didn't delete it, but the answer should have been unaccepted. I do not understand how it could happen that the vote was transferred to Community user
@Braiam If we delete an account as a sockpuppet it will invalidate any votes made by that account. If we don't think it's a sockpuppet, but another user entirely, we have to escalate to CMs who have a tool to invalidate votes. So sockpuppets are the only exception we have
@Yatin Indeed a bit weird. Also, it seems that this was triggered by a new answer posted to that thread, which has a very similar format as the now deleted one. I wonder whether Smokey somehow picked up the wrong answer, and why the reported one hasn't been deleted a year ago.
I keep getting "A new version of ALPHA VERSION of The Close Vote Request Generator is available, would you like to install it now?" popup even after updating the script.
Not sure how the audit machine selects the username, but it seems to have spells of using a particular user. I think they're always real users, though.
I thought about editing it the last time it was brought up, but I decided it was most likely going to get closed and deleted, so I didn't bother. Shows how much I know.
@RyanM Of course it does, but the question does not go in that direction but rather to ask about the characteristics of the HW (for example, flash memory, type of packaging, pin configuration, etc.)
It's trying to solve the problem "When I program the 32 TQFP device on a PCB however, the device gets flashed but my program does not run."
If someone said "I'm trying to run my program on [Intel CPU 1] and [Intel CPU 2]" and asked about the characteristics of that, it would be clearly programming
I don't see anything asking about flash memory characteristics
It is that precisely that problem depends on the HW, so I think that the most appropriate place for that question is: electronics.stackexchange.com
@RyanM I am electronic and the questions are clear: I thought these are the same devices in 2 different packages. Is that a wrong assumption? Is that question about programming or electronic circuits?