@AmitJoshi "Giv me tha codez" is not a reason to delete valid/useful content (found in the answers), right? How can it be asking for external resources if there is an answer that provides code? Should it actually be re-opened?
@ProQ basically yes, but don't blindly edit them; review for low-quality content and probably vote to close the ones which should be closed and eventually deleted
perhaps a simpler task is to review the close queue for those tags
I failed an audit on stackoverflow.com/questions/72902751/… because it showed completely unrelated tags like sed in the audit, is this something they added recently or have I just not been paying attention?
no, the tag went away when it revealed that it was an audit
if I visit the review queue from the dropdown, it does filter by [sed] which apparently was something I did the last time I manually reviewed (which would have been a long time ago)
Is my comment on this question appropriate/correct? I think that it it's too much code, but I don't have a lot of expertise in that particular area, so I'm not sure.
@miken32 Why would you delete that instead of say moving it to super user? 5k views, +8 votes on the question, +27 on the answer. It has clearly been useful to people.
@dbc The same reason we don't allow questions about cooking here, regardless of how useful they are to other people. Leaving off-topic content on the site will just encourage more and more of it, IMO
@dbc FWIW, aside from that literal title, if you google "how to open all tabs from synced devices in Firefox" (the generic way to ask that specific question), the top result is Firefox' own help page on exactly how to do that: support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/view-synced-tabs-other-devices
So it is not like the SO question is the only place to find that info on the web.
What's the right flag when an article is copy/pasted without attribution in violation of the referencing policy but the poster is clearly affiliated with the source? RAA? Spam?
Some of that last block of Smokey reports has links to the same website that is the username of the account. So a red-flag (spam) is probably acceptable for some (most?) of those.
I guess what I meant was, in general, copied content/plagiarism + link to promotional content = spam flag ok. Just plagiarism = mod flag
@SunderamDubey Depends upon whether there is promotional content. The one I commented under didn't actually contain any promotional content (i.e. links to the original site or product name drops) so I flagged it as a referencing violation.
The ones that have been deleted as spam do seem to include promotional content.
@SunderamDubey Personally, I say that if they're spam. Flag them as spam. If a mod declines the flag (because the spam was not obvious enough), you can mod flag after and explain why it is spam and the content should be removed.
@SunderamDubey Oh wait no there is promotional content: Standard code signing certificates from XXX.com include validation of the identity... So you're good.
I was just giving a general rule. And did note that I thought a red flag would work for at least some (most?) of the smokey reports. I just wasn't saying definitely it would for all of them without looking at them.
@tripleee That link will automatically filter the close vote review queue for the tags specified in the URL. In this case, that's ?filter-tags=shop,shopping, which are the tags being burninated.
@AdrianMole The question is asking how a particular piece of code works (or more specifically how the algorithm works). I don't see how it can be a typo/not reproducible.
@cigien Whether it's Newton's Method or Heron's Method is irrelevant ... it's a well-documented, well-established algorithm that any quick Google search will discover.
@HenryEcker Yeah, it came up in a search for something on MS and doesn't look like spam to me. It's not a good question. I'm happy with it closed and deleted, but it looks a lot more like a confused user rather than spam, IMO.
@AdrianMole A very brief search didn't yield anything. Have you found a target? If not, the request can be binned. Unless you feel your request reason is in fact applicable.
@AdrianMole I have, and I don't see how explaining how newtons method works qualifies as resolved in a way less likely to help future readers. plenty of coders have never heard of newtons method.
@Ethan in the future, if you'd like a request retracted (e.g., this one that I've handled for you) you can @ping the most recently active room owner and we'll move it to /dev/null for you
(we encourage pings because otherwise it tends to blend in with the conversation and can get missed, resulting in it taking a while to actually get handled)