Someone upvoted that second flagged post! If only I'd known all I had to do was post "good question. very good question actually" it would have made getting rep so much easier...
@sideshowbarker Contrary to close-votes by you and @HovercraftFullOfEels, that's not a request for an off-site resource. I do, however, agree that it needed to be closed as unclear. Apparently, by virtue of my being a moderator, the system let my 1 vote outweigh your 2 votes, showing 'unclear' as the final reason. But I still have to nitpick about that not being a resource request. If it were more clear, it'd be a fine question.
(Sorry for the false ping to @Ruli, who had previously posted a [cv-pls] for that exact same question. His, however, was requesting closure on the basis of the question being unclear, which I actually agree with.)
@πάνταῥεῖ What is that question missing in terms of an MCVE? Can you leave a comment? When a question includes code that is not obviously missing anything or obviously too long, the MCVE close reason is not sufficient to explain the problem to the asker (or, often, even other close voters).
@CodyGray You’re right. Even at the moment where I marked it as off-site request, I thought that wasn’t accurate. In hindsight, should have just used unclear.
Not even close to a "new" level. There's a textbox mods can type into when approving or declining any flag. It might as well be labeled: "Any snarky comments to add?"
@Spectric Could I ask you to refrain from sharing links to user profiles? It might give the impression that we're moderating users, which is best avoided.
@Spectric It happens more often than you would think. Someone gets their question closed for a legitimate reason, becomes apoplectic for reasons unknowable, and then discovers the rate-limits that are applied to all users, but wrongly associates that with their question being closed and/or the individual users who voted to close their question. They embark on a campaign of rage, either against the site or against the specific users whom they perceive to have slighted them (or both).
Best to just flag this sort of thing as "rude or abusive" and move on. There's no sense in trying to understand it, there's limited sense in discussing it (although sometimes humour can be had, but that can be dangerous), and there's definitely no sense in wasting time dallying over it.
@mickmackusa unless you're planning to have a stroke, the virtue of "meekness" is well advised and opposed to apoplectic, you might notice its use is no less rare and perhaps even more warranted. (If folks add the virtues opposed to arrogance and vanity to that, they'll be on the right track :) )
@Braiam @Dharman Sockpuppet accounts which violate the rules for using multiple accounts are typically deleted, particularly those which do so with respect to voting between the accounts. Unless there are a very large number of votes by the deleted user, the votes are immediately invalidated upon deletion. Above certain thresholds, the invalidation of those votes by the deleted user is kicked up to CMs to make a choice as to if the votes should be invalidated.
Above other thresholds, deletion of the user by moderators is not allowed by the system. In order for such a user to be deleted, the action must be requested to be performed by the CMs.
Is editing a question with one account and answering it with the other account allowed? Both accounts belong to the same person if that's not clear. There doesn't seem to be any kind of voting fraud
The situation here is, editing account has full editing privileges, and edit is minor. Answering account has a couple hundreds of rep, the answer isn't accepted yet. I can raise a flag if you want to see the post where this happened @Cody
I was certainly trying to say the same thing as Shog9 did, in exactly that post you were thinking of.
@oguzismail Yeah, I mean, if it makes you uncomfortable, you should raise a flag. That's the main thing. It sounds suspicious to me, but I can't say for sure. No harm in a mod investigating it.
I mean, why would a user with editing privileges be creating a sockpuppet account to answer their questions? Smells like voting fraud abrewing, even if it hasn't actually happened yet. Call me skeptical.
@CodyGray Because the user doesn't want to use their apparent "knowledge" to make their answer seems like more valid? As always, I have an example elsewhere where a user created an account to answer questions because they didn't want to use their privileges.
But they work well for deciding when to raise flags.
One note, @oguzismail... Referring to your "previous flag" in a subsequent flag doesn't work well. I happened to see and understand it this time, because I was looking at your specific user's chronological flag history, but that's not normally how flags are presented. If you need to refer to a prior flag in one of your flag messages, you need to link to the post that you flagged.
I'm not even sure Shog9 rule is ok, in some cases I see how another account is needed to improve transparency but some how people using multiple accounts should be forced to indicate it somewhere as in profile
@PetterFriberg I don't see why that is a problem. Often, an investigation/consideration of confidential information is required to make the best decision, and that shouldn't be transparent to anyone else.
@Dharman I don't follow. I assume that in most cases when the OP translates themselves they are getting help from someone else, or is using an online translation machine. What makes you think they understand the translation in that case?
The translation was suggested by someone else. I don't know why OP accepted it or whether it is correct. All I know is that we should never translate questions.
Btw, the translation is more of a interpretation. The original in italian just say "I'm getting this error, here's the code", without explanation of what the OP wants to do.
@Dharman Yes, we shouldn't translate questions. But if it's a suggested edit that the OP accepts, I fail to see how that's fundamentally different than someone else translating the question offline for the OP, which we would of course accept.
@Dharman I understand your desire to close questions. In this case, your stated close reason is incorrect. If you feel that the question should be closed for some other reason, then the onus is really on you to at least provide that reason. I don't feel it's appropriate to just ask others to come up with reasons to close the question. It's your cv-pls after all. If you don't have a specific reason why the question should be closed, could I ask you to ping an RO to bin the cv-pls request?
If it didn't have an accepted answer by the OP, I think Dharman would have a stronger case. In this case, I think the situation has shifted from one where the OP matters to one where the question is just an addition to our knowledge base.
@CodyGray For future reference, in case I've misunderstood something, is the OP accepting a suggested edit that translates the question not acceptable? If there's a meta about this, I'd appreciate a link as always, if you have the time of course.
Ah, that's fine of course. I just don't want to be questioning requests if it goes against established consensus about something. Thanks for clarifying.
Indeed. One should definitely not translate questions. One could even argue for the editor of the suggested edit being suspended. I was just confused how that translates to the question needing to be closed.
I'm not even that attached to the "don't translate questions" guideline.
It's a weird edge-case exception to our normal rules that edits that make the post better (especially if they salvage it from the brink of closure) are always good, and that the OP is irrelevant.
While there's good logic behind it, I don't think there should be sanctions for people who don't know it.
@CodyGray I'm not saying I'm a fan of this approach, but I have heard it suggested (present company included?) that sanctions are actually a reasonable way to instruct users on proper protocol. One of the arguments being that users don't always read the explicitly stated guidelines anyway.
@CodyGray Could I trouble you to point me at the canonical metas on this? The question not having been translated by the OP has been touted as a sufficient reason to close a question regardless of anything else, multiple times in this room. I had assumed from that it was mostly obligatory.
The knowledge can be at your fingertips, too! That's the magic of search.
Note that this guideline was arbitrarily added at revision #5.
And then the editor had to backtrack at revision #9 because obviously it's fine to edit answers :-)
And then the whole business was removed in revision #12, with the note that it was added after the answer was accepted (implicitly saying that it changes the meaning after the fact).
And then a then-mod modified the wording again in revision #14, softening it significantly.
Then a not-then-mod modified the wording again in revision #17.
So, once again, I am amused by what you call a "consensus".
@cigien with "older" mods I have got naa flags declined on non English answer because they where easy to translate. While yeah maybe the flag should not be declined but I can't see how if the mods like to translate they should not be allowed to do that
If mods are allowed well then everyone should be :)
@CodyGray That language is much more flexible than I thought it would be. So for example, I could add a translation in a comment, ask the OP if they agree, and if they say yes, I can then edit the question. That seems to be perfectly fine according to the FAQ.
Of course, that process would not really work for requests posted in here, at least to be able to edit before it gets closed. But I've been posting cv-pls for questions I come across on main, without paying any attention to whether it might be a good question.
I'll definitely stop posting requests for those unless I'm sure it's an off-topic question regardless. I suspect getting the OP to agree won't be hard, they're usually willing to take any help people are willing to offer. And if the question is reasonable, I don't personally really care if the OP understands it. If it adds value to the site, it's good enough for me.
@CodyGray This is it. That's exactly what consensus is. If you think consensus means that literally everyone agrees with or likes the current state of affairs, or that things won't change, then we're using the terms differently.
Uh, yeah, exactly. We're clearly using the term differently then. I think we can continue the discussion on the definition of consensus in the Ministry at some point.
Do you think it needed to be deleted at the time when it was closed? I closed it a year ago. Normally, when closing questions as lacking an MCVE, we do not delete them in order to give the person a chance to edit them.
I agree that it would be reasonable to delete it now.
@PetterFriberg Yeah, the question of NAA flags on non-English answers is tricky. As to the second comment, "If mods are allowed well then everyone should be", in case you're not joking, I have to disagree with it completely. One of the major reasons to have mods at all is to do stuff that needs to be done, but that we don't want regular users to do.
Unless I've misunderstood, and you're talking about some specific thing that currently only mods can do that you feel regular users should be able to do as well.
@cigien in this case the mod edit the answer (using Google translate) it was an answer with 1 simple sentence and then code. To me it seems reasonable to be allowed to make such an edit. As for mods verus users the statement was only that we should have same guidelines
Sorry if I'm missing some subtlety in your reasoning here. I'm simultaneously browsing through several dozen pages of results on Digikey because their filtering options are insufficient to narrow down what I actually want, and that's slightly irritating me.
To be clear, @PetterFriberg, I think it's ridiculous to decline a NAA flag on a non-English answer. I don't know who did that, but I don't think the mods would do that now, nor would have done it in many years.
@PetterFriberg Declining a NAA flag seems strange, even if they felt like translating the answer instead of deleting it. I don't agree at all with the second point. I definitely don't want the same guidelines for mods and users.
For answers, it's a choice. There are two valid choices: (1) translate it, or (2) delete it.
That applies to both mods and regular users.
A NAA flag is valid, because deletion is a valid course of action.
We should not keep inappropriate content around on the site just waiting for someone to come along who can speak the language to translate it or understands the technology well enough to translate it with machine assistance.
If that person happens to show up, whether a mod or a regular user, then it's obviously fine for them to translate instead of flagging.
@PetterFriberg Ah, I was unaware of that, thanks. I've only personally interacted with about 3 mods myself, and while they're quite willing to voice their disagreement with policy, they have been very good about following it. Which is nice, I'm glad that things have changed :)
He means that most of the recently-elected mods "came up" through SOCVR. I didn't; I didn't show up here until after I was elected. However, I spent a considerable amount of time on Meta, more than most mods of the time or now.
Brad's still a mod, just not as active now. I can't think of any notable times where I've disagreed with him. He follows policy pretty consistently. And when he was actively moderating, he was active on Meta, too. (Less than me, but that's not really a fair comparison.)
But, Bhargav was probably one of, if not the first mod to declare that Meta was his boss and that, as mod, he was just to follow consensus/policy established on Meta.
Prior to that, it was more like you elected smart people whose judgment you trusted, and they did what they thought was best for the site.
Part of that, of course, was because Meta wasn't nearly as well-established as it is today, so it would have been a terrible boss.
"declined: I don't know what to do with this flag because a Meta search turned up nothing" :-)
@desertnaut np. Just a suggestion, but since I started using the Request Generator userscript, my rate of errors of this nature has dropped considerably. That might be something you want to consider as well. Not that userscripts don't have their own issues of course :)
@HovercraftFullOfEels Ah, true, it does. But I'm not sure how you can tell, when the question is that unclear. Maybe it was more clear to you than it was to me?
@cigien Yes, by someone who hadn't actually voted to close. It was odd. I deleted it.
@HovercraftFullOfEels Hmm, okay, understood. I still think it's better to close such questions as unclear or for some reason other than no repro. Even with the context you provide, no repro seems a confusing choice. If it were as simple as, "This should not be done. Use a pizza-stone over an open flame to cook a pizza.", that would be a valid Q&A that could arguably help others who are equally confused in the future.
Mods are still part of the community. They still have opinions, and they still express it.
The question is, what happens when you, as an individual mod, disagree with what has become established site policy, strongly supported by the community?
@JeanneDark Yet, there's this Johnny-come-lately who keeps beating me in the Participation stats. You wouldn't happen to know what's up with that, would you? ;-)
I've found that much of meta "consensus" is just drama making. If you change things and nobody shouts, then it either isn't as important as the drama made it look like, or nobody really cared.
@CodyGray BTW, what I said, I literally saw it happen. There was some drama about not deleting one question, low and behold, it was deleted some months later and nobody noticed ;)
@Braiam That's not entirely fair. When you ask people their opinion, and give them all the facts, they are going to have an opinion. When you later delete the post without them noticing, yeah, they're not going to have an opinion. That doesn't mean they changed their mind and suddenly agree.
@user202729 Yes, that happens when the suggested edit queue is full.
@CodyGray No. In this case, the meta drama was against "every kind of deletion" ;)
It's the "we delete too much" mentality. That position, makes any argument for deletion because it deserves it, to fall into deaf ears. There would be no convincing argument of the contrary. Those kind of arguments I can do without.
If you use AutoReviewComments, their library appears abandoned so I have a beta branch. I removed their internal update script so please report any bugs
Better time to plug that it's ill-advised to post noisy comments underneath posts when a downvote, flag, and/or close-vote would speak louder.
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If you're posting a comment, it should almost certainly be one that you're composing specifically for the post itself, providing unique advice that can't be canned.
... just notice that the answer that OP linked already (appears to) answer the exact same question; however OP didn't say what exactly they didn't understand.
Is "please explain this answer in simple terms" ontopic? (on the other hand we do have a "please explain Ukkonen's algorithm in simple terms" question)
@Chipster Yes, replies by users to SD reports (or messages posted by SD and deleted) get archived with the report (e.g. why). Replies by SD to replies to SD reports (or messages posted by SD and deleted) get archived with the report (e.g. SD's response to the why).
@Makyen Okay, thanks. So if I could just ask a question: whenever I've written back "why?" to SD, I've had people here suggest the MS link. Is it preferred I use the MS link instead of replying "why?"
@Chipster Using the MS link is less noisy in the chat room, so it's preferred by many people. My personal preference is FIRE, which will show a popup upon button click which allows you to give feedback (and flag, if desired) with clicking a button. The FIRE popup will show another popup with the why info when the question title is hovered. FIRE is, by far, the interface I use the most to give feedback and flag SD reports.
I also use AIM which provides inline information about what feedback has been given and if the post has been autoflagged (and if you are one of the users who autoflagged).
user10957435
@rene Ah. That suddenly makes sense to me. Thank you.
@Chipster Well, other people generally object to the additional messages, which are often seen as noise, given that most people get the information in other ways. If you use why routinely, you'll probably have people remind you about other ways of obtaining that information on a irregular basis.
Is there a reason you don't want to use FIRE and/or AIM?
user10957435
@Makyen FIRE and AIM are user scripts, right?
user10957435
I haven't fully warmed up to them yet. I'm still a little paranoid about user scripts.
@Chipster If interested (e.g. if you just want to try them out), you can use the code here in a bookmarklet, or the code here copied directly into the chat room tab's console in order to run AIM and FIRE in that tab.