No worries. I voted to delete anyway. In general, it's better to avoid del-pls requests for posts that will roomba anyway, unless there's some reason to get rid of it fast, since there are at least some members in the room who run out of delete votes.
Should this question be protected? It's somehow got 41 answers (most of them code only with no explanation) and I kind of don't think it needs any more
@DavidW Wow that's.... astounding. It's funny because the output presented in the question is not even the actual output of the code, and the real problem of the current code is basically a duplicate of this one
@Tomerikoo I think the core question is probably taken from HackerRank, thus a lot of people end up searching for it and then posting their solution. I don't think I have the patience to read the code and work out what it's a duplicate of
But I was thinking that protecting it would at least stop most of the new answers (but wasn't sure if that was an appropriate use of "protect")
I decided to protect it anyway (someone else can always undo it). And if someone can find a good reason to close it then that's fine too
I think my conclusion from "help me understand the cutoff..." is that it's on the absolute borderline - there's a stream of low-quality answers but probably not very low quality answers. I doubt that I'll recieve an angry message from a moderator about absusing "protect" though :)
Why do you think the answer should be deleted? It's an answer to the question. The score and the comments show it's wrong and while it's accepted, it has now been unpinned and is at the bottom.
@Dharman It does have value. Not as much as a correct answer, but still. If I was in the same situation, looking for a solution, I would see that this was not a good option. And being accepted (ie. OP considered it) maybe several people think that something like that could or should be attempted. So knowing it shouldn't is valuable to some extent.
@AdrianMole You need 15 reputation to upvote, so when you accept an answer, the answerer can upvote your posts so you get enough rep to upvote yourself etc.
@AdrianMole Enough to establish that they likely gave each other enough rep to upvote and then actually used the privilege. They may both be somebody else's sockpuppets (but I don't see a suspect either). Still worth investigating, especially considering the very low quality of the accepted answer.
@AdrianMole There is no evidence of any voting fraud. The easiest course of action is to flag both as NAA and leave the matter be. If you want to be thorough you can ask moderators to look into this, but I doubt it's necessary.
Note: I generated the password at passwordsgenerator.net and it has a way to help you remember the password: # SKYPE 4 walmart music * coffee BESTBUY % % SKYPE { 2 yelp APPLE nut
At any rate, it might be an exploit. Not sure if it matters for SO, however, I'm pretty sure that if an app connects to Gmail, you have to authorise it. That's what Thunderbird does, you don't supply it with UN/PW, you get a login form from Google where you have to enter your credentials. Then the app gets a key to use. You can revoke that from your Google settings (somewhere).
I'm also not sure how successful an app would be by trying to use UN/PW to log in. I think your account settings would affect that but normally you'd get a 2FA prompt on your phone. At least I do.
@VLAZ you're making a number of assumptions: user is in control of the used device, the software actually tries to login instead of just harvesting the data, etc...
@VLAZ no, it's a plausible use case scenario that would render that application effective (where you were making assumptions it wouldn't be effective). Has a sort of phishing feeling about it.
At the end of the day, any code could be misused. A loop can be used in cracking a password.
I don't think we should be watching out for those unless it's very clearly the case, e.g., "How to crack a user's password". If a question is "I have user's credentials, I want to use them for SMTP request", I don't think we should really step in to do much.
As it happens the question is closed for missing debugging details. I agree with this. Unless the user edits it into something more malicious, I have no ethical concerns. And if the user edits it into something more answerable (e.g., reducing the code to just a few lines of code that fail) then that would probably remove the ethical concerns.
@bad_coder It's a voice assistant. That's how you interact with it. I'd accept that it's not a good voice assistant but seems to work in according to the purpose stated.
wow, phpclasses.org is an extraordinarly bad site. I downloaded two scripts that not only are outdated, but contain obvious errors. Award winning scripts. Updated "yesterday"
Disclaimer: it's probably mighty illegal so don't actually do it... but I'm also not a lawyer and I'm not allowed to affirm that it definitely is not allowed
multiple-choice currently has 233 questions from different domains and programming languages. It has a tag wiki:
Multiple choice is a form of assessment in which respondents are asked to select the best possible answer (or answers) out of the choices from a list. The multiple choice format is mo...
I'm not sure which is worse the fact that apparently Google+ still exists (wasn't it closed for basically having unfixable security issues?) or that there is apparently a JS classes website. I'm afraid of looking at it.
TylerH, RUN! Adrian is advancing like a horror movie serial killer towards you. From my extensive knowledge of horror movies, I can give you a few tips: 1. Don't be black. 2. Don't split off from the party.
5 different (mostly unrelated, tag-wise) questions by the same user (all from years and years ago, with no recent activity) were put in the queue around the same time.
While at least one mod is OK with such user targeting as I recall, I think most are not OK with such activity. We'll see what happens I suppose
@FélixAdriyelGagnon-Grenier Nope; they are actually asking what to do with their imbalanced dataset. There is a whole bunch of different methods for dealing with class imbalance, and not all of them involve artificially balancing your dataset. At best, this is POB; at worst, it is about ML methodology. Either way, it should be closed.
@FélixAdriyelGagnon-Grenier no wonder that the answer starts as "I would suggest to [one way of dealing with imbalance...]"
@desertnaut Probably needs an SME to chime in. To me, it looks OK but I've no clue about the code. Just as a question structure - "I have this, I have this question about it". It's entirely possible that there is no clear answer, though.
Does anyone know how the First Questions queue dropped from the tens of thousands to just a few hundred? Did they kick out/age away a bunch of stuff or did folks actually tear through a bunch of questions over the weekend?
@Dharman Are you sure they are sockpuppets? As opposed to a voting ring. I figured it might be that somebody was helping their buddy with early rep on SO. Well, or just sockpuppets. That was my two initial thoughts on seeing this. You might have more information I don't.
@manro You order them in the order you would think they would make a good mod. As for reputation... it's not necessarily an indicator of activity. I would say this user had more activity than some high rep candidates of the past
@manro I am not going to answer this for 3 reasons: 1. I am politically neutral. 2. This is not a suitable place for this kind of questions 3. This is not a suitable question to ask anyone, especially SO mod candidate
I see that, under the new rules for displaying answers (no more the accepted answer first), neither acceptance nor a bounty are enough to resolve ties, as it would (maybe...) expected: stackoverflow.com/questions/67537605/…
I'm not familiar enough with the technology, but it looks to me like an attempt to provide a useful tool which "extract[s] flow-based information" to solve the problem of "extract[ing] flows instead of packets with tshark".
@desertnaut Like I said, I'm not overly familiar. If tshark produced some sort of output, and this program was capable of parsing that, is that an attempt at an answer?
@desertnaut the only time asking about how to use end-user software is on-topic is when it's software "commonly used by programmers" which a packet capture program certainly is not.
Does anyone else find "accorded" in "Community moderators are accorded the highest level of privilege in our community" to be odd English phrasing? I would probably use "afforded" before I used "accorded". Thoughts?