Why is it that when I click "Run query" on a SEDE query it shows me "{"captcha":true}"? Before it used to just show me a captcha because I don't have an SEDE account/.
@Vega I suggest you open a custom flag, and point to their comment that explains that it is actually an answer to another question (not obvious at first glance that it is NAA, so little surprise the flag was rejected IMO). Have left a comment myself too
@desertnaut Yes, I was just reading the mod message on my flag. They say that mods cannot see the comments. In fact, I was hoping the review queue would see
@AdrianMole that's what I was thinking... created 12 years ago. Looks like a relic from the past. Maybe we should bury it again and don't think about it...
@tripleee good question :O don't know why the comment wasn't auto-generated. In fact that's one of only 2 threads so far with a good answer (would deserve a merge with the canonical).
Looks like someone's on a clean-up spree for the [hdmi] tag. Just got 7 consecutive posts to review in the CV queue. Thought I was stuck in a loop, for a while.
Cambodian and Thai are (very) distant relatives. They look (and sound) similar to foreigners but are almost completely unintelligible to each other. Same with Burmese.
Is this answer plagiarism of this much older one? They omitted the code formatting, left the brackets in "dynamic include ()" empty, and changed "x" to "object" in the last paragraph.
He would have seen the post he deleted, which contained the plagiarism claim. Perhaps he has different 'modes' for handling different flags ... I could understand that.
@EJoshuaS-ReinstateMonica Maybe not, since the post author does self-disclose. But, absent some code showing how the linked project solves the problem, it may be NAA. Or, just a downvoted, not-very-good answer.
Well, they're an established user who has made some decent contributions, so maybe let's not be too hasty about raising the red flags? Hopefully, your comment(s), the downvotes and a few NAA flags will encourage them to delete those two 'answers'.
@PetterFriberg Ok, thanks. Yeah, I'm not at all interested in keeping the question or the answer. Just wondering if it's an answer, which if it's correct, it probably is :)
Yeah, I'm definitely leaving the post as is. It got reported by SD, and was marked naa, so I was wondering about that. Also, I don't know about the old rules, but I believe it's not NAA by the current definition as well. I can totally see a mod deleting it anyway.
@Machavity While lack of disclosure doesn't, necessarily, indicate there's an intent to post spam, it does make for a valid spam flag, as it's a lone criteria explicitly mentioned in the flag dialog. I would, at worst, "dispute" a spam flag on a post where there's no disclosure of affiliation. However, under most conditions, particularly when the OP only posts one or two such posts, I'd rather see a custom flag and/or a comment explaining that disclosure is required.
That would, of course, also depend on what it appears the user's intent is, as deduced by the content of the post and any other posts they have made. In other words, a user that appears to be trying to actually post good content gets a lot more leeway than one which just creates an account and starts posting answers about some "new, great thing" they made/are affiliated with, even if that thing is actually relevant to the questions on which they are posting answers.
@tacoshy it's actually little more than a link-only NAA, but the guidelines for such answers in the specific case of questions asking for recommendations (as this one) is not to flag the answers as such (if I am not very mistaken)
I recently came across the tag hyphen, defined as
The hyphen character, also known as the dash or minus sign.
To me, this seems equivalent of having a tag like ? or even e for that matter. Is there some meaning I am missing for this, or can we burninate? hyphen experts, please advise.
@Makyen Yeah, I should probably clarify that linking to a library/repo without disclosure is unlikely to be sustained as spam. Linking to a website is less savory and paid services is the worst of the "legit answer" spam
@NathanOliver not wanting to put pressure on your agenda or time but I dropped a question in Slack for the RO's and the transcript has progressed a bit so I'm afraid you might miss it. If you find a few minutes check the back room script for Sunday, 13th. It is not urgent. Just a FYI.
Of course, PHP is way out of my field, but closed Q/As with nett overall -ve scores sink down to the bottom of the SEO stuffs, even without us making them pink.
... BTW (in case you don't yet get me) I'm just asking about things, rather than asserting Yay or Nae.
So, what harm is this one doing? And why should we delete the (seeminlgy) decent answers?
And who are we to judge what value others may find in a closed post (if they even find it)?
Before voting to delete, please check whether there are any good answers; if so, then the question should be flagged for moderator attention as a potential merge candidate. We don't like to lose great answers!
... I don't want to fall out with any of you guys in here. Like you, I care about this Community. I just want to learn/discover/understand how curation should work.
... I was very keen to cast delete votes, when I first earned that right. But now, after engaging in a number of Meta.SO posts, I'm a tad confused. I just want to know...
I as a rule don't actually act on posts brought up here, nothing against the room, just my own choice. but, what I do is i look at the question, and determine whether or not people who have that problem will find the question given it's title, contents, and answers
you can look at the views and voting history to sort-of back that up
@AdrianMole This one is not answering the topic at all. The question is "Php Ensuring a unique username" and only 1 answer shows how to make a unique constraint.
@Dharman I'm not questioning the closure. I'm just confused about why it should be made pink. It won't come up on any search from non-members, so why is it harmful? It's not like we're saving space on the database.
We could remove all the code and error messages and leave only the first sentence, then change the duplicate target, but we would still be left with the answers
If we go the other way around and change the title and remove the first sentence, then we need to remove one of the answers
The whole thing is riddled with SQL injection
The answerer won't lose reputation so they won't mind
in the case you linked specifically, as has already been mentioned, it seems like a very low-quality effort all around where the title doesn't even reflect the issue OP is asking about
Like Braiam I find it frustrating and harmful when I search for something, find a SO question with a seemingly perfect title describing what I want to do
and then find out it's about something else entirely
(looking at you, WinForms vs WebForms)
@AdrianMole So, then you should easily be running out of delete votes every day, no?
Anyway, my standard for delete voting non-dupe questions is "is this a good question that could have value for someone other than OP?" If the answer is no, it's probably delete-worthy. For dupe questions, it's "is this a useful duplicate target, and does it have an accurate and SEO-friendly title, and does that title match the problem in the body?" If no, again I likely would cast a delete vote.
2
if a question is titled something like "PHP SQL query errors"... sorry but that's not helpful to anyone
You might as well just say "my code isn't working" in the title
Here's my point of view: Some posts benefit from having multiple signpost with different titles, or body. Sometimes there's a slightly different message. However, some posts don't require any more duplicates. Adding more just makes it harder to find the post you are looking for. And when it comes to question asking one thing and the error being about something different, such questions have almost no value.
We're not trying to hurt answerers. They should have been prepared for this when they answered obvious duplicate. After all, they can add their answer to the canonical if it's needed.
When I decide to delete a question I look at both question and answers. Sometimes answers on dupes are not half-bad, so there's no point in deleting them
@Braiam I used to grade that kind of stuff as a TA. There are obviously plenty of folks who know what they are doing, but others just know enough to pass. :)