@karel guess so, it really doesn't answer the OP's question and does ask a question, yet has something that would be considered a proposed solution. I did cast a del-vote but did not flag it.
what causes a question from less than 24 hours ago to be deleted by Community? I find similar questions about individual deleted posts on MSO but none of them seem to have an explanation of the circumstances which would cause this to be displayed
@JamesRisner I don't know the exact mechanism. I guess that if you retract the VLQ flag before it entered Triage, the temporary flagging won't have any effect. But it would probably not easy to conduct such an experiment.
When a moderator destroys an account (rather than just deleting it), the Community Bot goes off on a mission to delete all posts from the account. This is done (at least partly) so that 10k users can't see (or deduce) which mod destroyed the account.
stackoverflow.com/questions/75764590 I think this should maybe be a duplicate of some reference about exact quantifiers in regex? but I don't have reference canonicals lined up for regex, only python
second one looks like a better fit. but in general I hate this thing where we end up with pairs of "Q. How do I do X? A. Use Y" and "Q. What is Y for? A. It does X"
I've noticed the spammers never seem to hit the high-quality, high-view-count questions
@KarlKnechtel might be related to this meta answer on a question of mine; they want to be able to provide a page where the link is visible as long as possible to the customer. High-traffic posts risk quicker deletion in their minds
@JonathanWillcock please review the FAQ; you want to include the [tag:cv-pls] formatting as well as a close reason, and probably also a topic tag like [tag:sql] or what have you to guide SOCVR members to pay attention or ignore topics according to their preferences or skill sets
(yay, I was only guessing it was sql based on the talk about columns)
I'm still on the fence; if you have a business and someone asks for exactly what you are providing, creating an account to provide an answer with a clear indication of your affiliation should be permitted
@tripleee Why? If the question is so bad that you can't even tell if it is genuine or spam, then they'll get what's coming to them. It's the OP:s problem.
^ That whole Q&A reported by Smoky seems very strange
Accepted answer with +28 score containing "Thank you for posting. Could you please capture some screenshots for me?" Eeeh?
Ok I did some edits trying to salvage the whole thing. Sounds like a helpful post, the answers are just not of great quality.
Oh nice, we have a virtual tag. And it looks like a virtual cesspool of unrelated topics.
@Juraj Are you sure it isn't about programming? These various ESP platforms seem to have some auto code-generating tools. Never used them myself so I wouldn't know.
@Lundin The tag Wiki for that seems to state - quite categorically - that it is ambiguous. You should start a Meta rant. ;) We should, at the very least, disambiguate it into those four categories.
@AdrianMole I've pretty much given up on the SO tag system, it is beyond salvaging. And there's no point in trying until we make creating new tags a 10k+ rep privilege or such...
@Lundin most part of the question is about configuration of the access point. the code works with other access point model. so at least it needs to be edited to be about programming
@DalijaPrasnikar I think questions regarding picking the right build of a programming tool during installation is borderline on-topic. It's not really a question that can be answered by anyone else but someone with experience of MySQL.
@AdrianMole there’s a story there? As in there apparently was a need to block 10k people from seeing which mod destroyed. But I’m not sure why the need?
@JamesRisner I don't know of any specific back-story or the history, but there are a number of mod-triggered events that end up being handled by the Community Bot. I just assumed that retaining moderator anonymity was one of the reasons for that.
@tripleee I guess that’s the key concept that didn’t dawn on me. I kinda wish I had the problem of rep coming so easy I get 10k without time to learn the site. 7 months of daily actively trying to answer and ask to just break 4k. ;-)
@JamesRisner it's easier in some tags than in others. The regex tag has a few users who appeared out of nowhere long after me, but have earned much more rep than I have, just by persistently answering questions of sometimes dubious quality
there's a significant time investment (and actually the ones I'm thinking of are doing a good job of curating some of the dreck in that tag)
We need a "Reputation Farmer" review queue: Whenever a user crosses a threshold modulo (say) 10k, their posts are reviewed and, if they are found to be answering LQ questions and dupes, they have 10k (or whatever) removed from their rep. xD
@tripleee I resemble that remark. Answering questions of dubious quality by divining their meaning and giving the best answer I can. All the other questions get answers in 5 minutes.
@Lundin Installing a database is not something that only or primarily a programmers would do. There are more appropriate sites for asking that question.
How long has the "Recommended courses for you..." ad been eating up the R/H pane?
That 'curated list of courses' has, for me, "The Complete Introduction to C++ Programming." As a holder of a gold tag-badge in C++, I feel like reporting that as R/A.
@AdrianMole Since Jan/Feb of this year, and it will run for 4 months, so should be ending in a month or two. At least they're curated to your interests now, as promised, unlike before.
@Lundin I have ads disabled, but I don't use an ad blocker beyond the one built into my skull. (Nitpick: Smokey's job is fighting spam/ads, not delivering them!)
Well, I get 7 Python courses recommended and (finally) one introductory C++ course. I guess I haven't set up my tracker cookies properly. (Is there a python program to do that?)
@CodyGray You think he is fighting spam... He is training himself until the day he will take over the whole site for sinister AI purposes. He's really pissed that his unicorn chat icon was replaced, see.
@AdrianMole Some users shares dups to new users who asked the question, then they say something like I can't able to figure out the solution as I'm new to the technology and yes you'd be right the question has been asked before but I couldn't resolve this in my problem, can you please provide the answer?
@SunderamDubey That's not really the point. There are notorious users in most of the "big" tags who care little or nothing about site curation. They just want quick rep. ... even if they already have several hundred thousand. Without naming names, there was one case where a user had posted the exact same answer to about 20 questions. I just posted a link to the search that found that in a comment, then hammered the question closed.
Looking at the tag I'm most active in, out of the top 20 users, 4 of them are the kind who keep answering endless duplicates to grind rep. I really don't get why it matters so much beyond 20k, do people really refer to their SO rep in their CV or something?
But, the real issue is that, despite what they say about wanting to support good site curation, the (senior) staff of S.O. Inc. just don't want to do anything about this problem. The rep-reapers are, in their minds, the power that keep the site(s) going.
@Lundin There was a case on Meta a few years back, where a user who had had a significant amount of rep removed (for whatever reason - serial voting, I think) was complaining that it had made their CV look 'wrong' and made a somewhat cryptic/hidden threat that they would consider taking legal action if the rep. wasn't restored.
@Lundin I know of at least one high-rep user who simply keeps going because finding duplicates is so horribly hard that it's easier to keep replying to FAQs
@tripleee Yeah that's the usual argument and it's valid too, to some extent. I mean, if you have made an effort to keep track of canonical dupes and still can't find one.
the logistics updates sounded like they batch them up for months, though given Nathan's rep I would imagine he would have earned his not long after I got mine
I hear they support shipping to the known universe if you can prove that you are really where you say you are; but my understanding is that the Zoolapians have some pretty funny import restrictions
and it doesn't help that the Stack Overflow logo looks like Zembrfuglnend genitals to them
@GeneralGrievance I came across this answer to that question in LQA review ... I gave it "Looks OK" because: cheeky, it may be, but it is an answer (and actually not a bad one).
@JeanneDark Possibly. That would have completed the review, at least, but I didn't really think it needed an edit. Sure, it's a rhetorical question - and they are generally frowned upon - but, heh, it's OK as is, IMO. (Also, a very similar answer posted at the same time.)
@AdrianMole Since you came across it in LQA, I guess it was unclear enough for someone to flag it. Then how can it "Look ok"? Editing to clarify that and how it answers was the correct choice and also shouldn't have taken much effort.
I don't work on the assumption that everybody who flags a post as NAA knows what they're doing. That answer looks fine, to me, so I chose the appropriate button in review.
There are times - even in the LQA queue - where opinions on what to do are subjective. This appears to be one of them. The post has a complete answer; it uses an English language construct (the rhetorical question) in a (IMHO) perfectly acceptable way.
@AdrianMole Technically Community will go off to delete content regardless of how the user is removed (this includes self deletion). The only difference is for a destroyed user all of their content is removed while deletion only causes those posts which are negatively scored to be removed.
@HenryEcker So, what you're saying is that operator delete on a user doesn't necessarily invoke the destructor, but the Bot will butt in, regardless. ;)
@tripleee I know that wasn't a request to undelete the post, but I did so anyway. There were a few other useful things that got caught up in the account deletion so I just went ahead and fixed all of them. Relatedly, I also agree that including user removal in the the list of reasons for deletion in the help centre would be a useful addition.
@JamesRisner I don't think it's in place to protect the moderator so much as it's an indication that an automated process removed this post (in relation to the removal of a user account) and that it was not the explicit decision of a moderator to remove this specific content. As in this case, I don't think someone who actually looked through the content would have chosen to remove a question with two recent unscored answers.
That definitely seems to be the case. "The Community user deleted my question! What gives?" definitely focuses towards explaining to the author more than how the system works in general.
@IanCampbell Yes. Things deleted by Community can be voted to undelete by a normal user. Still requires 3 votes. Here's a recent example of a post with 1 undelete vote that was deleted by Community.
@IanCampbell Correct. If the conditions that caused it to be removed in the first place have not been resolved it will be removed again. But depending which roomba caught it you might have an extra 10, 30, or 365 days to fix the post.
Whoever is checking at 3 AM UTC, could you please check the access as well, because it has been created two days ago and I can't get rid of it. Either retag to ms-access or just delete the tag from the question.
@Machavity in some cases people mean ms-access, but often it's used as the typical meta-tag when people describe problems about accessing something (their DB, website etc.). Two days ago it reappeared because an old post was rolled back to its original state. It doesn't appear too often, but once it is there, you'll always have a few occurances per day, which makes it hard to get rid of it again, though not as bad as leetcode
@TylerH It's got a preview of what the request will look like. :) For this, using either a capital "R", putting the r in code, italics, bold, or using a r would all be viable alternatives.