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00:00
that's just a tab... that says history... because who knows why
community effort lock, i assume just to prevent more answers.
:shrug:
The mod who locked it also deleted several answers from high rep users who wouldn't be stopped by the protection, so yeah, maybe that's it. Still, seems a little heavy handed just to prevent answers.
Which part? My guess as to why it's locked, or that it's heavy handed?
i don't think it's particularly heavy handed for a mod with heavy experience in a tag to go above and beyond in that tag
Ok, I see.
@Makyen Oh, perfect, thanks. Clearly, searching with the URL doesn't work. I should have used the title of the question instead.
01:11
@Calculuswhiz That needs to be closed before it can be deleted, and it's not eligible for a cv-pls due to its age.
01:26
@cigien Oh, gotcha... Still learning the ropes here. Does it not meet the "really bad" criteria for cv-pls either?
I see the 11k views at the top, so somebody's been looking at it.
@Calculuswhiz I don't know. I'm not personally a fan of that exception, since it's highly subjective, but this has come up before, and the RO ruling was that invalid requests like that are ok-ish, so long as members don't make a habit of it. (I'll look up that conversation in the transcript). The del-pls itself is at least invalid, since closure is a pre-requisite for deletion.
Ok. @Makyen or other room owner, can you please remove my prior invalid del-pls request?
Should I also hold off on resubmitting as cv-pls?
@Calculuswhiz Here's the ruling. You can read through the related messages if you like (they're a bit scattered, but you can click the arrows to get to them). The gist of it, from what I understand, is that if you can make a case for it, then a request is fine. If you ask me personally, I'd say avoid the request, but I tend to be picky about rules, and I've been advised not to do that. You should probably get at least a second opinion.
To clarify, the particular post you linked should absolutely be closed, and deleted, and if I saw a link to it outside this room, I wouldn't hesitate at all. But the rules in this room are there for good reasons (whether I understand them all, or not), so I try to stick to them when I can.
@cigien Ok. Thanks for the advice. I'm inclined to agree with sticking to the rules. I'm mostly just concerned that the 11k views is an indication that the post is attracting some undue attention.
01:45
Right, and maybe an argument could be made that it's a "low-quality magnet" or something like that. Practically speaking, if an RO doesn't clean it up soon, it will get closed, just by virtue of being linked to in this room. Not that that has anything to do with the rules, just thought I'd mention it.
 
1 hour later…
03:14
@Shree I only just now noticed that Unclosed Request Review Script artifacts aren’t showing up here. Do you know if SO made some changes to the chat UI which broke it?
hmm, sorry — I guess maybe I was just not looking in the right place
seems fine now, on nevermind 😀
@sideshowbarker Try reloading the page. The SE API wasn't working for a bit, but appears to be back up.
 
1 hour later…
04:44
^ Did smokey get this one? Seems like it has been alive for far too long
...thanks @SmokeDetector
04:56
@Gowiser awesome. It might get an upvote in 6 to 8 weeks.
05:13
waffles
05:28
@rene Didnt do it for votes. Did it because you said it didnt work.
06:00
Can any part of this post be considered an answer? It's clearly a new question, yet the FA reviewer said "Looks ok" and it was upvoted at the same time. The question is "Draw a border around a matplotlib line"
@JeanneDark looks like "emphatically NO"
Thanks. I just wondered if heavy editing might turn it into something useful.
06:17
@NathanOliver SQLite (and derivatives like this) is not a DB that "runs" on a computer. It's a library used within an application to use a database stored within a file (or files, depending on configuration, e.g., write-ahead logging).
@tripleee what is this requesting recommendations for? "without using any libraries that provides tail-like feature preferably sticking to core libraries"
@RyanM hmmm true, though probably a duplicate
and closed as ...general computing. Sigh. FYI @AlonEitan @SurajRao Node.js is a programming framework.
@RyanM Before you edited it out, the "preferably" in "preferably sticking to core libraries" looks like recommendations or at least inviting recommendations to other than core libraries.
@JeanneDark I think "without using any libraries that provides tail-like feature" was pretty clear, but even so, that wasn't the reason selected by the majority of voters (one of the close voters also voted to reopen)
Could well be a dupe, as tripleee notes.
06:34
It was the close reason in the cv-pls request in here
my bad, I misclicked when selecting the close reason, but edited the cv-pls here to suggest resource req
Ah, you had replied to my complaint about the general computing closure.
@SmokeDetector is this NAA? It's mostly links but does the recommendation in the last paragraph save it?
(leaning NAA since the bulk is really just links)
@JeanneDark eh, just some sloppy terminology on the OP's part. Node.js is highly modularized with a set of "core" modules like fs, so I really hope that's not what tipped the voters off. Agreed with the proposed dupe by @tripleee, though - any watchFile dupe target should do for the question
@OlegValter Should we re-close with that target?
06:51
@RyanM I found another one with more info on watchFile and linked in a comment but fine with any of them becoming the target - yeah, I'll VTC shortly
What about this question (NAA NATO)? Judging by the answers (one accepted), this is not a programming question.
Yes, might be the best option.
jps
jps
08:14
@gnat Well, I would not flag it as spam. The OP came IHMO with good intentions, just not knowing the rules. A spam flag has quite harsh consequences. Pointing to the rules should be enough.
Good intentions?
jps
jps
It's not the typical spammer placing advertisemts for total OT stuff on many sites but probably just a naive guy looking for programmers on a programming site.
 
2 hours later…
10:18
@gnat Link text does not match the linked question, I think you may have had a copy-paste issue
10:35
Ugh, reporting issues with the review queues is a nightmare...118 answers to check for dupes.
RO, please remove my cv-pls here: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/52991770#52991770 - there's an error in URL. Thans @RyanM, this was copy-paste mistake indeed
Is this typo? based on self answer...
@SurajRao yes, 13 > 7
11:42
Very nice feature request on Meta @E_net4 very compelling and well presented!
11:55
*nods nervously*
12:32
Is this spam (although they disclose affiliation)?
@JeanneDark I think so. It's a promotion rather than an attempt to answer the question.
I disagree; it seems responsive, especially since the accepted answer says "This functionality isn't available on Azure Databricks" - thus making a project that adds it relevant.
I'd give FP feedback on SmokeDetector, at least.
@RyanM Isn't there an answer that has a listing of all answers?
@Braiam Yeah, which is quite helpful, but a one-line summary only goes so far.
12:48
Thanks. To me that "answer" indeed reads more like an ad than an actual answer and it also doesn't explain how to use that piece of software. And the question is also not a recommendation question, but maybe it's too borderline answerish.
Yeahhhhhhhh I'm not happy about the phrasing, which is overly promotional. Left a comment.
@NathanOliver could you please delete my cv-pls here - chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/52991770#52991770 (it's invalid because of typo in the URL)
13:27
@Braiam It provides me an opportunity to downvote deserving answers without having to open a new browser window, so I see it as a major plus. It's easy to ignore them, though, since they're (rightfully) hidden behind a separate tabbed view)
14:47
@TylerH I really don't find any point trying to get to the answers when I'm deciding to close or not the question.
You've already said that
@Braiam I find them useful, as occasionally an answerer figures out what the OP meant when it's not clear to me. Occasionally that means I can edit the question into shape and leave it open, or maybe it was actually clear and I just misread it, and it could prevent me from making a mistake.
@RyanM If I needed an answer to understand the question, then I don't understand the question enough to edit it.
But if you understand the answer you can edit the question to ask what the answer says ;)
Because there could be several orthogonal interpretations of the answerers to an unclear question.
14:54
But, just because you don't understand the question, doesn't mean that someone else (the answerer) didn't understand it.
And that's exactly the mistake. Everyone should be able to understand it in context.
I don't understand (the purpose of) any WooCommerce question, but it appears that others do.
Yes, I'll be not able to understand every aspect of every product out there, but I should be able to understand the goal of the asker and how it's trying to achieve it.
It also sometimes allows me to dupe-vote instead of close-voting as no MCVE, when someone bothered to figure out which common mistake they made by completing the MCVE to figure out what crashes (or perhaps just staring at the code longer).
This would, admittedly, be more helpful if I had a dupe-hammer. Some day...
@RyanM is this not just another "give me teh codez" question?
15:04
Yes, it is
@miken32 It asks a specific question implementable in like...I dunno, 10 lines of Python code?
that's why it's useful
@RyanM Meh, those kind of signpost aren't useful anyways.
Related question to my last cv-pls: Do community comments get cleaned up if the author does nothing, and if not, will they interfere with roomba auto-deletes on questions with 0 score?
@miken32 "give me teh codez" questions are requirements dumps that are multiple questions or an entire project, not how to write a single function that does a well-defined mathematical calculation that could be useful to others who want to do the same thing
> Im new to android and thought it would be fun to develop an app that goes out and checks woot.com. The idea I came up with is for the app to be a widget that refresh woot.com once a day and displays a picture of the item and price. If the widget is clicked on it would open the browser to woot.com. In theory this seems like it would be easy but Im having trouble figuring out where to begin. Any help would be appreciated.
an example ^
15:41
@RyanM It is actually a duplicate of the link miken provided
@Tomerikoo I mean, it is now... great answer BTW :-)
@RyanM @TylerH / RO: Please bin this, as the duplicate suggested in the comments has been improved to cover this.
16:16
@Calculuswhiz They don't get cleaned up, and they will interfere with Roomba, as far as I know. They can be flagged for removal though now, at least.
@TylerH Thanks. I figured as much. What flag should I use? "No longer needed" because it's outdated? I'm not sure it feels 100% right to use that one.
@Calculuswhiz yes that's gonna be the best choice for Cmomunity comments from review, pretty much any time
@VLAZ weirdly, not spam. Might be spam seed but seems a bit unlikely.
> I was trying to put this question in Quora but I was having some server issues with it, so I decided to put the question here. Sorry
7
*sigh*
ugh, our HR director uses comic sans font for her emails
so irritating to read
17:31
@TylerH No jury would convict you.
@TylerH do they use the font too when telling someone's sacked? :)
@Dharman What was that?
@Braiam unpinning accepted answers, I presume?
17:49
I this a new way of showing removed users? Did I miss an anouncement?
@AdrianMole Next year, when you're 14, you'll learn about the single-pling. It's put in front of for example 10 for a year to signal 2010 ;) Of course being both 13 3/4 and quite old enough.. I can see how 2010 may seem "new" to you ;)
might be related to the type of user deletion
requested by user vs spam
requested by user, would make sense to go anon route to completely remove the ability to see what that user posted
Never noticed such a card until just now.
17:55
@AdrianMole I don't have a scientific proof, but this happened to me when I asked to de-associate from one of my own posts. So I guess the generic anon (short for anonymous I guess) is replacing the username in these cases
Ah! No deleted account, just dissociated post.
I've seen them on old deleted users. Sometimes the old username remain, sometimes they're "anon". I'm not sure when which was applied though. It may be nuked versus deleted or disassociation.
Here's a meta-SE on disassociation: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/96732/…
hmm. We probably need to make a canonical. All those cases differ in what SEDE reports. This one lacks OwnerUserId which indicates deleted user, but has OwnerDisplayName set to anon.
> Your username will no longer be linked and will be shown as "anon" on the post.
@Calculuswhiz - yup ^
@AdrianMole Maybe related MSO answer
@OlegValter Be sure to dissociate yourself from the canonical that you post. xD
@AdrianMole perfect plan :)
18:11
@AdrianMole they probably had the username "anon" and had their account deleted.
@OlegValter Let's hope not
@TylerH I think Tomerikoo's post above is correct: it's a dissociated post
@TylerH see the quote from the MSE post - it is a disassociation result, no doubt about it - they say "anon" replaces your username, and in case of deletion it is usually "user\d+"
@RyanM If I recall correctly those incidents create a new username of user#######
@OlegValter Ah, then maybe I have the cases backward
@TylerH can't blame you :) Those rules are bonkers, frankly
If only SO posted an exhaustive list of all system rules and exact parameters/thresholds of how they calculated/determined everything... :-P
18:17
preposterous
@TylerH egregious. Everyone knows the more confused users are about the rules the better
@TylerH I think that's called open-source code ;-)
@TylerH I talked once with @Catija about it - does not look like SE is ready to go this way at all. Which is a bit sad because it would drastically reduce frustration levels on all fronts, IMO
@OlegValter I mean, a wall of text with specific radio buttons about all the rules and that you understand each of them before you can ask a question is the right way to do that.
18:35
@Braiam do you mean checkboxes? :) On an off-note, I recently signed up for Codidact, and loved their interactive tutorial for asking and answering a question. SE could take a note. Same for any other action taken on the site, including editing, reviewing, flagging, closing, reopening, etc
I personally find such tutorials condescending and exit them as quickly as possible, but, maybe that's just me
yeah, they are a little annoying when you know what you are doing, but heck, if that prevents a bunch of go-lucky users from jumping ahead with complete misunderstanding of how to ask/answer, I can live with it, @KevinB
Every few months Outlook updates and gives me a tutorial for how to search my emails. Something I'm used to doing since before ever setting eyes on Outlook.
@OlegValter to be clear I was being facetious; they don't release such a thing for good reason: it would enable massive amounts of abuse
@VLAZ it does not keep track of whether or not you used it before?
18:40
@VLAZ Yeah, I'm glad it only updates so infrequently
@TylerH you mean that the codebase is so bad that releasing it would reveal glaring security issues to anyone who just glances on it? :)
Teams on the other hand updates like every day
@OlegValter not the codebase per se, mostly the parameters of what constitutes things like voting fraud detection, automatic alerts to mods and the staff, etc.
I like to think their security practices are fairly good
@TylerH meh, dunno, I do not subscribe to SE's idea of "security by obscurity" - it just creates a lot of frustration on all sides
What do you mean? They don't use security through obscurity at all
security through obscurity would be like if they let anyone access admin functionality just by going to an unusual URL like stackoverflow.com/secret/adminpanel
what about post bans? That relies solely on no one knowing what it is. And I sincerely think we would be better off if we knew exact metrics. Right now it just allows them to say "oh, it's a secret" instead of actually thinking about how to reduce abuse vectors
18:44
@TylerH And keeps changing random stuff. I'm pretty sure MS has re-built the functionality several times because some updates broke previously working things.
@TylerH Sorry, SO staff, for the non-zero number of hits you're surely about to get on that non-existent page...
Also the details of how voting fraud is detected and hunted down are kept obscure to prevent gaming. (which is a reasonable approach)
@OlegValter those are policy things, and actually the metric for post bans isn't secret. It's not necessarily easily discoverable, but it's definitely acknowledge and discussed on Meta in various places
You have to have a positive question score over the last 7 questions or whatever
@TylerH "necessarily easily discoverable, but it's definitely acknowledge and discussed" - this is exactly what I call "obscurity" :) But it's not like I mean that everything should be transparent - rather than going full open-source for most things (voting fraud algos seem like a good example of what should stay hidden) would bring more good than harm
@RyanM Yes, this exactly. Telling people "the system will consider it voting fraud if you vote more than 3 times on a single person's content within 30 seconds" will just cause a massive increase in voting patterns of 3 times in 31 seconds instead
@OlegValter It's not intentionally obscured, though, so it's not considered a matter of security
18:47
@TylerH If you know the metric, perhaps you can answer my MSE question :-)
@RyanM all closed questions contribute a negative point toward your score, yes
dupe or otherwise
That's not correct, according to Tim Post
deleted questions count twice against you, I think (or maybe it's vice versa)
@TylerH On a related note, the reversal script managed to miss serial voting on my account a couple of times because it the votes were on different minutes but still 10-15 seconds apart from one another.
@TylerH well... I doubt staff thinks the same way - I've seen multiple responses that they intentionally keep this non-specified/vague. And vehemently disagree with that approach
18:49
Well I can count the number of times Tim Post has been right about something on one hand, tbh, but if you are referring to the quote there, I think you are reading more into it than what the quote is saying
He is saying "you don't automatically get banned from asking questions just because your question is closed as a dupe"
That doesn't preclude dupe-closed questions from contributing to an automatic ban, it just means it's not enough to unilaterally enact one
@VLAZ oh yeah, I'm sure anyone active in user moderation will eventually have an experience or three of clear serial voting that got missed by the system
which is why I'm so confident that if the exact metrics were revealed, the problem would only be much, much worse
Hmmm. I suppose that's a plausible read of it, but I don't think that's what he meant. But also rene notes in the comments that animuson and Martijn have both told him that his SEDE query for post bans isn't entirely accurate, either, even if it's pretty good.
@OlegValter No, radio boxes with 2 dud options and randomly ordered
@Braiam ah, you meant options with choice and bogus options to check knowledge - yeah, with right execution would be great. Note the "right execution", though - I am not sure I trust SE to be able to manage that :)
19:00
It may be worth pointing out that there's not just one ban. The rolling rate limits are separate but often get forgotten. Many people who are "banned" are really just rate limited and don't have to wait the full six months between posts.
5
@Catija AFAIK, there are no more permanent quality bans.
I've only been searching for 5 mins, but so far I do see they are considering *all* the details together to be a secret, at least. What I can see is:

- downvotes count against you for it
- closure counts against you (nowhere do I see a carve-out for duplicate closures as an exception)
- deletion counts against you (if the Q was deleted before it turned 30 days old)
- deletion counts against you more if you delete stuff that has been answered/highly viewed
- upvotes count in your favor, more strongly than downvotes
The actual q-ban or a-ban is "permanent" in the sense that you only get to ask one question every six months until your rating improves.
i didn't think there was a difference between a 6 month limit and a 30 day limit, just whether or not you meet the criteria for one or the other
@TylerH heh, some day we will simply croud-source the exact algo :)
19:04
@Catija I expect some beatings
@Catija btw if I found an old comment that is dead-naming a staff member (unintentionally due to the age of the comment), should I mod-flag that to get edited?
@TylerH I think there are a few of those, probably wouldn't be too hard to sweep up ~all of them with an SEDE query to fix it in one fell swoop.
@RyanM and to be clear that info is all from posts or comments by Jeff, Shog, Adam, etc.; it's not intuited from experience or anything (I am fortunate to have not experienced a question ban so can only speak second-hand)
19:18
@RyanM Here's a recent-ish (2019) case of a dupe closure resulting in a temporary rate-limit (not a "full" ban): meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/389242/… so it makes sense to extrapolate it would count toward the full ban if they count toward the temporary rate limit (since the full ban is for worse cases)
@TylerH I would assume it was the votes (-5/+0 and +4/-1), not the dupe closure, that were primarily responsible for that.
I'd say they both count
though I do have a correction to make to the starred list above: deletion doesn't count against you (the system is ambivalent about that), unless you deleted it after it was answered
then you get a very stiff penalty, relatively-speaking
Based on the full quote:

No, there's no automatic penalty applied for questions that are marked as a duplicate of another. However, try to learn from the experience so that you improve your ability to search, this can be done by comparing what you searched for with the title of the duplicate.

A pattern of duplicate questions in short succession will likely attract down votes from the community, which could ultimately affect your ability to ask questions on the site.
That seems to strongly suggest that it's just the downvotes, not the duplicate closures themselves
@RyanM This: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/236836/… and this: physics.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/5951/… describe situations where the askers had positively-scored questions closed as dupes and received the question ban warning
@TylerH That's what I'd recommend, yeah.
19:28
Anyway, back to the original thing, which was the formula not being secret, I think I was thinking of the "positive question record" formula, which is published at meta.stackexchange.com/questions/234259/asking-days-badges (it's (total questions - negative questions - closed - deleted)/total questions >= 0.5 for anyone who doesn't want to click through). That particular case is for the nice Q/A badges, but I suspect they consider it somewhat for the Q-ban, too
That's also where I was thinking deleted questions count "against" you, I'm sure
@TylerH And you can't be banned for a single bad post. :P
@Catija Thanks; I went with NLN first since it seemed to be conversational at best, but it is a Meta site, so we'll see. I bookmarked it and will re-visit if the NLN flag gets declined
@Catija Yeah, I didn't want to get too exhaustive unless you decided it was best to disappear everyone involved in the conversation for getting too close to the comprehensive set of criteria :-P
Yeah, I think something like "This comment deadnames someone but it also seems like it may not be needed any longer since this is conversational at best" or something like that. The NLN may get it deleted but there's little context, so if, say someone's saying @deadname but that's a common name, the mod may not recognize what the issue is. :)
@TylerH Bah. I wouldn't do that. :)
@Catija True..... *insert perennial wish for mods to see more context when handling comment flags here* :-P
The motivation for my question is basically to find out if I'm giving the system the information it needs to do its job if I close, but don't downvote, a question.
19:36
@RyanM I think it's not necessary for individual users to try to police users to the point of ensuring they get a question ban. I'm not suggesting you're targeting or stalking users, but I think you can leave it to the system to manage, though if you think a question is close-worthy, then arguably you should downvote it too. You certainly should downvote if you think it is delete-worthy.
I know downvotes are limited... that is true. Just means you have to use your judgment
Ah, to be clear, I'm not looking at users' post history here. This is generally about actions I take on posts from the CV queue.
@RyanM You want my screed on downvoting?
@Catija Sure!
i think it's unfortunate how quickly people end up question banned
and how often
but... what can you do about it, if they just keep posting low quality stuff
I've been trying to make a point of upvoting more questions when I see well-asked ones.
Of course, one doesn't see many of those in the CV queue...
But occasionally one gets a Leave Open, an edit, and an upvote.
19:39
Downvotes weigh pretty darn heavily on posts... when stuff gets down to really low numbers, it can make it practically impossible to recover from with the standard upvoting practices on the site... essentially, I'll bet you that more recent questions get to -3 or -7 than get to +2... I'm not trying to discourage downvotes generally but I will say to use them thoughtfully.
Tacking on another downvote when there are already some ends up doing more damage in some cases and makes it more likely that they will ever get out of the ban, meaning they're more likely going to struggle and, well... they're not really going to learn much, unfortunately.
3
That's a lot of why I don't downvote questions in review unless I think they're totally unsalvageable. If I come back a couple days later and the OP hasn't responded to the issues pointed out, and the question is still at zero score...well, then I'll downvote it to -1. But I want to give them a chance to fix it first and recover.
My one suggestion, for a change to the qban system to support users learning/improving, is having upvotes count more toward getting them out than downvotes count for getting them in, with more recent occurrences worth even more.
^ If I see a question in the queue that's already at -1 or -2, I usually leave it rather than adding another one
I understand that it can be tempting to say "this question is so bad, this person should never be allowed to ask a question again"... and then downvote into the basement but I request thoughtfulness in that situation. The system wasn't designed for that degree of long-term negative score... now, we should fix that - absolutely! And I think we will be looking at that soon... but for now, some clemency is appreciated.
However if I see a question that's positively-scored that I think is off-topic/low-quality, I make a point to downvote it
19:42
And that's fair. :)
i don't use the queues, so more often than not i'm the first vote on a post
@KevinB Except that one time I tricked you into reviewing
yea
lol
What? We allow (even encourage) clemency but don't allow fun!
19:44
I'm hoping that we'll be doing some digging into a sort of sandbox for new questions that allows people to help improve them/review them before making them live on the site. What this would also allow is for us to help Q-banned users get out by letting them use this draft phase to ask questions and have them reviewed before being posted, so I see it as a potential boon for people stuck in a ban, and hopefully a way to prevent more people from getting into a ban in the first place.
The concern we have is one of scale... while this may be a boon to sites like Code Golf, that have relatively small volumes, the influx of questions on SO might make it impossible without having significantly more people reviewing and helping to improve these new questions.
I'd be curious whether y'all have any thoughts on this. :)
@Catija I think a lot of folks will tell you the tutor system worked really well when it was demo'd
We don't just want more reviewers ... we want more good reviewers.
3
though I never participated during the trial, I see those comments a lot
@TylerH Yeah, that's what I keep hearing, I just also keep hearing that it wouldn't ever scale enough to be useful in general.
before i joined SO, i was moderating a forum. As a moderator, it was my responsibility to decide which posts were allowed to be posted, and to correct posts being posted, by new users. the benefit i gained from having that privilage is being able to be the first person to answer it. I think if we were to do a sort of, tutoring/sandbox-like system, the target audience would be the most active answerers, not necessarily the most active reviewers
they're the most likely to benefit from such a system, aside from the asker of course
19:47
I'd be concerned that someone would approve a question that they knew was bad or even borderline just to be able to answer it and earn some rep.
@Catija The feedback I'm trying to give the system most of the time is "this question was problematic but not horribly so." Generally, if the question gets closed, I won't go back to check its score, because I hope that the closure gave the system the information it needed. Otherwise, I'll wait a couple days, check back, and downvote to -1 if the issue isn't fixed by then and the post is still zero-score.
And so I'm hoping that the answer is "yes, the system listens to these and people shouldn't try to make sure that closed questions are also negatively scored."
The dev-team responses to the feedback on the latest UI {cough} improvements have been encouraging. Many of the requests have been dealt with (after a fashion), and that suggests (to me) that the team really does want to help reviewers. Need some time to let the dust settle, and see if the overall review rates and quality have improved.
that is a concern, but... it's what they do now effectively
But I do appreciate that idea - I think that it makes sense - the question is whether those people can review the posts thoughtfully and nicely. I'm guessing that people who failed that would be kicked out of being able to use the sandbox - essentially like being review suspended.
most of the big answerers i know don't do that, they are actually picky in what they answer and dupe close/off topic close where appropriate. There's certainly exceptions though
Might be a case where a merit based criteria would be appropriate
rather than rep
19:50
Or to put it another way: I have no desire to pile on more downvotes where they aren't needed.
@RyanM And I think that's likely the line of thought that was in place when it was first created - "we want to give you a chance but repeated failure will end in you not being able to ask more questions" but improving a question that sits at -4 is futile. Even if it's edited and fixed, the likeliness of someone revisiting the question and changing their vote is low.
for... it's just. this question should be roomba'd
i don't care if it gets answered, closed, etc, it just should end up deleted in 6-8 weeks
@KevinB I'd like to move most privileges to merit-based rather than rep based, to be honest.
7
but there's no real tool for that
other than closing and downvoting, ofc
But then you'd have to devise a system that assesses "merit." How would that work?
19:52
I think y'all were talking in here yesterday about the suggestion to ask a new question rather than edit the existing one if it were closed?
... strikes me as a rather subjective quality.
i think rep to get your foot in the door, with super limited tools would be fine, then as you use the tools you increase your ability to use them
@Catija Yep, that's my other reason: I know full well I don't have the time or desire to monitor every single question I vote on to see if it improved, so I'll leave a close vote that can be undone by someone else in the reopen queue if the question's fixed, rather than a downvote that will stick around.
@AdrianMole Similar to the edit suggestion system. You reach n suggestions with a certain percentage of accepted ones, you get the ability to edit fully without needing 2k rep.
@AdrianMole number of successfully completed peer-reviewed actions. Codidact has this system, for example. Anything's better than equating capital with merit
19:54
yea we were discussing the dupe close messaging
That one's the simplest but we can find similar ways to address other privileges
i brought it up, after having forgot about anita's response earlier in the year
Hmm. I know some mods have issues with not being able to do anything to remove specific privileges ... other than a full account suspension. It's been raised (in here and elsewhere) particularly wrt to misuse of the gold-tag dupe hammer.
@Catija yup, we were, anything in particular?
@KevinB Now that we've changed when posts go into reopen review, I'm hoping that we can change that messaging - I'm just waiting to see some results of whether there's an increase in successful reopens or not. I think that there have been cases where trying to get the existing post reopened feels futile to newer askers because their post may be heavily downvoted, so a fresh start feels easier.
That said, I feel like there was a bit too much pollyanna going on there in thinking that the asker would actually improve their question rather than just reasking it verbatim (or nearly so).
@AdrianMole Yeah, I think that if we stopped making things rep-based, we'd be able to allow mods to revoke specific privileges in a more fine-grained way.
19:57
Could there maybe be a pop-up in the reopen queue that suggests to upvote when a reopen vote is cast? (There's something like that in Triage, IIRC, but I don't go there very much.)
Probably not all of them, but a list of them.
@Catija I think the safest assumption in designing systems is that your users are monkeys with nukes :) Start from that, and build up privileges gradually (that also applies to the "ask a new question" wording)
yeah, its hard to get out of the hole when you're in it. it's hard enough already to attract upvotes when you're not in the hole, as an asker
@AdrianMole Maybe? That'd be a recommendation if you're up to it on the MSE post about the new features. I think in general we avoid encouraging people to vote because a lot of users feel like we're trying to tell them what to do - in particular telling them when to vote.
i mean, there's a popup every time you cast a downvote, sub 2k rep

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