@VLAZ How many views did it have while your CV would have been active if not retracted (highly likely > 100, but that's the views number which would determine if the aging away would have been 4 or 14 days). Assuming > 100 views, the close-vote would have been active for ~4 days prior to aging away. You wouldn't be able to re-cast the close-vote for 14 days after that, so the minimum you'd need prior to being able to recast is ~18 days from when you cast the CV.
The one I'm testing on MSE is a similar situation: CV cast and then retracted shortly thereafter on a question with > 100 views. At the moment, that was ~21 days ago (04:38Z on 2021-10-06). The CV dialog for me on that MSE question looks similar to the one in your screenshot, but, of course, with different dates. I'll keep checking every couple of days for at least into 30+ days, in case the code isn't accounting for the 4/14 day aging based on views.
@AdrianMole Yeah, I don't have to go to any other site to see the UI. Makes me feel so much more important! Although, I sometimes don't want to see the UI...
@AdrianMole Yep. It's a bit frustrating at times. :) It would be nice, for testing, to be able to emulate accounts at different privilege levels, but I certainly understand why that's not a capability that's routinely available. :;
If a post goes from -3 with a delete vote, to -2 with a delete vote, does the delete vote still exist and just not show because you can't cast a delete vote? or does the delete vote get invalidated in that case
@KevinB A delete vote definitely still exists on that question, assuming we're talking about this one. The mod interface, which, of course, still permits delete votes, shows "Delete (1)". The delete-vote definitely doesn't show as invalidated.
So... I haven't been able to ascertain why you got it but I have been told that it is a legitimate email. Apparently Adam got one yesterday and it was confirmed as legit.
If you don't have any oustanding "business" with us - meaning contact form messages you want to have moved to the new system, you can probably ignore it and just wait to create a new profile whenever (or if) you create a new contact.
@Catija Hmm, will users who have used "contact us" get one of those if they have the "no emails at all from SO" option checked (I currently fall into that category)?
@Dharman I see one contact from you but it seems to be marked "done". So I don't see anything outstanding... at least, not that I can see. There's bits that I can't see, though.
@TylerH Those emails are created as part of a contact from us or one you initiate, so they ignore your site settings in this regard, or they should.
@Dharman Ah, found it in FD - you submitted it after the migration, so it's not in Jira, which is where I was looking :D
OK, so - it's not because we were migrating info from Jira to FD, apparently that's just the email that FD sends to people when they create a ticket. So... I guess if you fill in the contact form now, you'll get the email.
@Catija Well, the Stack Overflow logo would help. Naming the system in the email might help. "A shiny new system to help serve you better" is... really vague. I would expect something like "we are moving our "Contact Us" platform from Jira to FreshDesk. As part of that, this e-mail is getting sent out to all customers who have an open ticket with us" or something to that effect.
Also yes, including the user's SO username would go a long way, since that information is not provided in the Contact Us form, it would mean the sender at least has a way to connect an e-mail address with a username
@Catija At the risk of being a little blunt, the copy of that e-mail (and it may well be boiler plate from FreshDesk) seems to have the same issue as what is described in this tweet (CW: curse words, mildly NSFW language): twitter.com/cherrikissu/status/972524442600558594?lang=en or in other words, "non-descriptive, cutesy language that doesn't describe the actual content"
@Braiam That's great from a threat perspective, but from a "is the user going to bin this" perspective, it's far more effective (even for a programming site) to make sure the body looks right
There's a reason phishing emails work. The body has to look convincing to the layperson. If someone doesn't even bother looking at the email closely, they will ignore it and never get to the security stuff like DKIM, DMARC, SPF, etc.
@RyanM Yeah, I can't fix that, though. We've explained it a few times and I'm not technically knowledgeable enough to go into any more detail about it.
@Dharman Or, at least [sitenameyouclickedthecontactformbuttonon] user
Yeah, I realize that it's common to need alternate domains. But it is suspicious. If it were me, I'd ideally at least redirect from a stackoverflow.com link to the alternate domain, but of course that's not always practical either.
stackenterprise.co seems to be the URL we're using for FD entirely. Even when I log in, that's the site I see - not a [something].freshdesk.com or anything like that.
Well, you didn't get a response, so there's no link. I think it's just giving you future information?
But... yeah. I understand.
We're going to be spending the next few weeks getting stuff set up, so I'm probably going to put in a note with my manager about it but I think I'm going to say it's probably a bit higher priority to just get the migration done for now.
So, that form can also be used by non-logged-in people, so we'd have to tell it something to do when that happens. Probably not impossible, just something we have to work through as part of the transition. :)
I can see a try catch for that... try <look up email address to see if it matches a registered account. if yes, insert account> catch < insert "Concerned Stack Exchange Reader" > :-)
@miken32 Oh dear. When we say "canonical", that's... not what we mean. That's probably the most pathological case I can imagine of what not to close a question against.
Yes. Talking and typing at the same time is ineffective. At least when you're saying something different from what you're typing.
@HovercraftFullOfEels Rules are the same, regardless of who is involved. And, of course, in this case, I'm not going to cast any votes. But, I do not follow why you or others think that is clearly off-topic or unsuitable. It's not even broad. It's simply asking if it's possible to write a GUI in C# without using one of the built-in UI frameworks, like WinForms or WPF.
@HovercraftFullOfEels The user was being a jerk, so I moderated the question. At the same time, I thought it was a reasonable question, and could be a valuable contribution to SO at large, so I answered it. I think this is 100% defensible. The user continued parroting the same nonsense under the answer, so I had to moderate that as well, removing comments, etc. I don't really think there's a conflict of interest when one removes all comments under a post.
@CodyGray Yikes, yeah that seems like way too many steps to get to an answer in terms of appropriate dupe closer. @miken32 I am binning this as it does not seem to be an appropriate duplicate, since the question at hand is not asking what an error message means (and it's not an error that always has one answer across multiple occurring scenarios).
@TylerH Oh, sorry, did not notice that. (That banner doesn't show for mods.) Yes, that would be me, trying to mark a R/A flag as "helpful", even though the post could be edited to fix the issue.
I marked the R/A flag as helpful, fixed the problem, and moved on. Yet, the user overrode my edits, so I had to lock it. Anyway, now, the question has been deleted, so that "helpful" R/A flag stuck in there causes it to display the "offensive content" banner.
The fix for it is to dispute the R/A flag, but if I do that now, the question will undelete, and then it will look like I'm overriding the community's deletion of a post where I'm involved.
@CodyGray Yeah, that's a frustrating extra "feature" of disputing red flags. It's reasonable for the post to be undeleted, if the post was deleted by the community user as a result of the red flags (and it's not an answer where the question is deleted). The auto-unlock would also be reasonable if it only unlocked when the lock was the spam/R/A lock applied by community. Disputing red flags is helpful to have available, but it's missing having some conditions applied to the auto actions.
@desertnaut Any way I could persuade you to leave comments like this as edit summaries instead? I'm guessing that you use the inline tag editing tool, which doesn't allow you to leave an edit summary?
@desertnaut Yeah. The reason I think it's better is because it means no one has to go back and delete the comment later, should the question turn out to be one we want to keep around. And since it's only feedback for the OP, not for anyone else, I don't see the value in having it as a comment. The OP will still get an inbox notification that their post has been edited, so they'll still see it, in much the same way.
If it's a huge hassle, I understand. And it's also fine to forget once in a while. Just something to keep in mind. I see a lot of people posting comments that should really be edit summaries.
Again, not a big deal or a criticism. Just something I like to point out. I drastically overestimate the occurrence of it, of course, since I view everything through mod-colored glasses, looking only at the edited or problematic posts.
Hehe, yeah. And when persuasion fails, I always have a bigger hammer! :-p
@CodyGray @desertnaut @RyanM There's never an inbox notification for edits which are just changes to tags. See: answer to: "No notification was received for an edit to a post" for more detail about what edits produce notifications. Short description (without some caveats): > 10 characters in displayed text in the body or the title, not Markdown (e.g. a complete change to the URL for a link won't notify), or > 2 characters of code.
If it's a suggested edit, then you do get a notification.
Ah, well, no big deal. You have to open the full editor anyway to write an edit summary, so just make some other change. Isn't there always a "thanks" to remove?
To my understanding, offering to pay for solutions is not automatically spam. Per this meta, the offer to pay can be edited out, which is what I'm partial to if there's any hint of an on-topic question there.
@RyanM From SD's POV, they are TP, as we'd definitely want to block them at the system level. The first one was from 2014!, and the second from late 2020. I'm fine with red flags on both of these. However, after editing, the first one was just a close and delete, IMO.
Even without that they're not salvageable though - a good portion of the first one is exact arrangements for who they'd like to hire, plus the main point of the second one was to hire someone to do the whole thing for them (plus unattempted homework is OT anyway).
@EJoshuaS-ReinstateMonica Aside: unattempted homework is not off-topic. It should be treated exactly as if it's not a HW question when deciding whether to close-vote. If you think it's HW, feel free to leave a comment asking the OP to work harder, or whatever.