@cigien - thanks. Yeah, I initially contemplated including the comment as I sometimes do for the preservation, but for some reason decided against it (not sure why, though, now that you embedded it)
Is it best to mod flag when someone has posted their API key in error (and possibly doesn't realise it's still visible in the edit history)? stackoverflow.com/questions/66915567/…
is there any tool for reviewing my flagging history? I can see that I was active with flags already in 2011 when I first registered but I'm not sure if it's something I did for a while and then stopped doing ... a tool for plotting activity over time from stackoverflow.com/users/flag-summary/… going back to today would be useful
(I guess that link only works for myself; that's the oldest flagging activity on my profile)
@SurajRao I added another, more "canonical" to the second one. The first one is really just a typo. The only way to recreate that error is by passing an empty input...
Hey people, if a status-review question does not get an answered in a week or so, do I flag it for a mod review? I seem to have stumbled across a bug in the bounty system (confirmed by this flag)
I gave you the start of the transcript. And yes, it seems that for some reason the question is deletable in the grace period after the bounty ends but before it's awarded
Maybe it was same as mine. The bounty lasts for a week, after that time you have 24 hours to award the bounty if you haven't already. Those 24 hours are the grace period.
I think the linking was just because it was convenient. Why rewrite the information if we can just link to it. Basically, a dupe close to a wiki article. We do that all the time on the site to the canonicals and we don't consider those too broad
@Nimantha you're involved in all those questions as you answered them. We don't allow cv-pls requests in that case from you. Sorry. Please see also: socvr.org/faq#GEfM-no-requests-youre-involved
@Dharman They were bugs that lasted for a short period (2 days to a month), my answers added links to a Bug Reports and the respective status (Fixed); those issues have not be seen since (I use the Google Data Studio daily - the tag in question)
@Nimantha So? If the issue was reproducible in any given released product version then it might be the case that people using that old version will encounter it in the future, right?
Otherwise, why would you answer these questions?
The only reason to answer them is that you believe other people will encounter this issue also and you want to share the solution.
@Dharman As I recall we should only leave open questions where they can actually be reproduced (e.g. an issue with an old version of some tool/library). In a case where a website has gone down temporarily but is back up, that literally can't be reproduced by end users again reliably.
Noted, though regarding your question on versions, Google Data Studio is a web based service (think of Google Sheets), thus if there's an issue, it would likely affect all users at a given time; there are a number of temporary issues daily
But all my knowledge of PHP is from 5.2 (or was it 5.3?). The one that was around a literal decade ago. It's almost as if you suggest I shouldn't answer any PHP questions.
@Machavity I wanted to comment under your post on the "outdated answers" thread but didn't get around to it. Your proposal was good, taking the current model to also peer review the accepted mark. But I have a number of concerns about it. The recent incident about deletion votes on RegEx (that echoed on meta) is just one example that if you expand reviewing to changing the question mark you're inviting a tons of conflict, conflict of interesst, conflict between users, abuse, etc...
@Machavity Besides think about it (your posts on politics.se tell me you'll understand what I'm about to say), average users only have real sovereignty over their user profiles and their votes (up/down and accept). Taking the final word away from a user over which answer he accepts is perhaps the greatest loss of sovereignty for users in SE's history.
@Machavity I'd think carefully about that sort of "collectivization" on matter of principle alone (not to mention all the conflicts it'll bring). What is worrying is that no one mentioned this.