It's right there on the Mod Dashboard, under "Restrictions". You see "Review suspension", and also "Suspend user from suggesting edits".
The UI only lets you suspend users from suggesting edits when they do not have enough rep to have earned full editing privileges, but by a bit of trickery (sending the HTTP request manually), you can suspend someone with < 20k rep from suggesting tag wikis.
Speaking of searches that aren't consistently accurate, searching for plagiarism is a great way to figure out how the heck the code: operator works on SE search.
Yeah, I might. That'd require sitting down and doing some pointed testing, but I could at least make a start at one that could be improved with additional discoveries.
@CodyGray I have "Review Suspensions", but not "Suspend user from suggesting edits". I wonder how many other tools I don't get. Under "Informative Pages" I see eleven hyperlinks of which "Review Suspensions" is one. Is there another list somewhere in the mod dashboard? My dashboard is VERY lackluster, I would be surprised if SO mods had such basic looking mod tools.
@mickmackusa There should not be any tools that you don't get it. I don't know what "Informative Pages" is, but when I say "Mod Dashboard", I mean this page (to pick a random user on your site): joomla.stackexchange.com/users/account-info/16362
SO mods have the exact same tools, except ours are generally enhanced with userscripts that we develop ourselves.
I mean, I've only got the one diamond, but I'd be shocked if SE bothered making two versions of the mod tools. The one version already barely works ;-)
@CodyGray I only see "review suspend" on that page. There is no "Suspend user from suggesting edits" anywhere on that page. I went to another random user who is not currently suspended and I see the same options. I think we get different tools/interfaces.
Oh, incidentally, @IanCampbell and @mickmackusa... While review-banning a user gives you a nice bloated, buggy, browser-locking-up UI for sending the user a message to accompany and explain their review ban, that doesn't exist for the comparable suggested edit ban function. So, if you use this, you'll need to combine it with a mod message explaining that you've suspended them, for how long, and, preferably, why.
@mickmackusa There's no way that we get different tools. Does your site not have suggested edits enabled or something?
One difference in the tools is that mods on other sites have a convenient dropdown with a history of every mod message and reply from the last few days, whereas Stack Overflow has a dropdown that mostly says "$moderator sent destroy spammer to $user" repeatedly.
...wait, that might just be that the tools kind of suck.
I see my folly now. I was expecting to see the whole words as described. Now I see that the "I didn't realize the "no" was a hyperlink. Thanks so much." was relating to this topic/discussion. I was also tricked by the "no" being a modal trigger leading to a mod action.
@IanCampbell The per-site meta sites have a wider block on suggesting edits, though I'm not sure if that's actually exposed in the site config options or if it's just conditioned on it being a per-site meta.
@RyanM Your hyperbole vastly misrepresents the actual situation. Come now, don't be ridiculous. There are also many messages that say "$moderator sent a farewell to $user".
@IanCampbell Oh, right. Probably. I'll admit to having paid no attention to the list of knobs available on different sites to tweak the experience.
That's looks appropriate to me. Unfortunately, most of my volunteering is via mobile, when I am on my company computer (as I am right now) I will not be adding any non-work-related software onto it, and my personal computer is many years old, has temperature regulation problems and I don't take it out of its drawer very often. Maybe in a beautiful future, I'll start enjoying userscripts.
I used to do a lot of moderating from mobile. Review suspensions were extremely painful. Otherwise, no major issues. Well, closing as a duplicate was an exercise in frustration each time, but I found workarounds.
This was before they broke everything in the design of everything, though.
Asset tagging is useful for checking in and out the assets.
So, for example, I can file a ticket that says "I am no longer using the computer with asset tag XYZ, please retrieve it from desk location ABC-1234 and return it to inventory," and someone will show up with a cart, check the asset tag, and then take it away.