@RyanM IMO, it's below the low quality bar for deletion.
@Enet4 That's ... not easy to produce, because there are no reasons associated with each deleted action. It would be possible to derive an approximation, but it would require quite a bit of work.
@TylerH It's such a massive rewrite that a diff view doesn't really make sense, if you're asking for one to the previous CoC. If you're asking for one to what was proposed, then: Yeah, it would have been really nice to have a history on the proposal contents similar to a revisions page on SO and up to the published version.
@rene Any strike action (if taken) should be such that staff notice the effect(s) quickly but, long-term, the site isn't damaged. A moderator strike would certainly be noticed by staff, as they would have to step in to do the moderation. However, who would really notice if the active members of this chat-room were to stop doing what we do - other than the regulars themselves?
Also, any action such as setting the room to read-only could be readily undone by staff. They could even (temporarily) remove RO rights, etc.
@AdrianMole I do not agree that "freezing" this room would not be noticed. That suggests that what we do here does not have a real impact. Moreover, preventing long-term damage is not our job. We are volunteering our time because we like the "product". If the "product owner" doesn't act on addressing our "demands", then any lasting damage is on them.
If you are really concerned about long term damage, we can do something like redirecting requests and bots elsewhere and bring them here if/when the strike ends. It'd certainly make more work for us for a while, but at least during the strike, we have done all that could've been done.
p.s. if the staff does what you are suggesting, then I personally won't ever come back here. At that point, I don't care about "damages" at all. But I agree with @RyanM that won't probably happen.
hmmmm, the Archiver has stopped working properly on transcript pages for me, for some reason...
Looks like another conflict with Chat Improvements (cc @SamuelLiew) - don't have time to debug at the moment, but the issue I'm seeing is that the Archiver's mouse-hover menu on the right side of a message doesn't show up when I'm viewing the transcript; it does show up correctly in the chat itself, for comparison
@AdrianMole we're a "known" chatroom by SE, these days in a positive way. I don't expect SE staff to undo our protest. The main point will be: we want SE sites to host quality content vetted by humans. Our room is adding effort to achieve that. We're a cog-wheel in the bigger strike machine and therefor I believe that making clear our room is on strike is helping to steer the SE C-level towards a better decision (or two)
@rene I don't disagree with what you've said, there. Adding a wee bit of weight to a strike may be a useful gesture ... but that's all it will be. Now, if you could organize a site-wide review queue strike, that would have a far bigger impact. Or maybe just in the Staging Ground (still currently in Beta)? I haven't been active, there, for a while (other reasons) but that would be noticed by staff ... even if not the staff responsible for the AI moderation fiasco.
Is this really a duplicate, @Jason? Is it even about padding, if the pointer being present or not doesn't change the structure's size? The first version (pre-edit) seems a lot clearer than the second version.
FWIW, in the reopen review, I left closed but with "needs details or more information".
@rene Ideas: (1) Mods dish out review suspensions to all regular/active/obsessive reviewers. (2) Mods then go on strike so they can't lift the suspensions.
Well, I hoped Meta will be involved. I hoped there will be post with something like "we are going on the strike. If you want to join: 1. don't flag, 2. don't review anything in queues, 3. etc."
@AdrianMole I don't know position of CMs on matter, but I doubt SE will be left out of chance to restore the situation.
@markalex Nobody really knows the position of many staff members. One has made the announcement but they haven't personally 'owned' the decision. Other staff members who also don't like the decision will likely not say so in public, for fear of being fired. SO Inc. isn't a democracy.
@AdrianMole The first version(before the edit) seems to be more clearer as you said. Also I do think that the target duplicates explains OP's problem/behavior of the program.
@rene With the caveat that I'm not super active on Stack Apps nor do I have queue privs there... I'm not opposed to some users choosing to stop reviewing and coordinating that. Nor am I against mods striking. But... I don't like the idea of mods forcing other users to go on strike by issuing review suspensions. A mod taking away from queue privs from other users may come more across as a rouge moderator vs collective agreement
Are we yet considering the deletion or transfer-to-comment of link-only answers to the documentation? stackoverflow.com/a/4047912/2943403 ...I am super annoyed by these old, lame, lazy posts.
@Andreasdetestscensorship It's a trap. The url has spl-object-hash in it. Even if the link dies, the function is still quasi-expressed in the answer and therefore some curators argue that it still holds up.
@mickmackusa So flag as NAA, and provide a comment, explain that in minimal words, and the moderator handling the NAA flags will move the answer to a comment.
I fully support any moderators, reviewers, and users that choose to protest the changes. That said, I cannot reasonably support a moderator using their privileges to strip other users of their earned queue access because the mod chose to strike. A strike needs to be coordinated - a mod unilaterally stripping users of queue access is... not that. Sorry.
@rene Sorry if I came across as overly harsh, that wasn't my intention. I was trying to communicate that I'd like a strike to be as coordinated as possible with the intent of it getting the most done that it can, but at the same time, it shouldn't be forced upon users IMO. I wasn't trying to be super blunt, although I see why my message could get read that way
> To continue growing, every company needs to do more with the resources it has, and every employee (not just those in Sales) must understand that their actions impact revenue.
Makes it seem as if they fired people based on their opinions.
So yes, I think it’s safe to say that SE is no democracy.
I am speculating as to them firing staff that sided with, or supported, the community.
@AdrianMole It seemed like a serious suggestion, to me.
@Andreasdetestscensorship If I would work at a shop where C-level uttered that in public I wouldn't become more motivated to do my job, that is for sure.
Two things I noticed: yes the comment upvoted thing is shown. I mean it's not interactable anyway, so I'm not sure whether to remove it. I'll leave it for now.
@Adriaan Well, then you should leave comment under such posts. Because one or two could be left out, and a couple years later it would be easier to understand "why the heck this was upvoted?" with comment)
I have a question: I made this disambiguation request, but it has no responses, comments etc. Have I done something wrong? Or is it just bad timing? And if latter, should I delete it and recreate later if we all comeback after current situation?
Size can be an issue, too. Lost my husband at the store the other day. He walked right by me, but because I was on the other side of the shelf, he didn't see lil ole me
@M-- Oh! Around here some shops offer tiny little carts for children to push around. You can probably fit a box of cereal in it and a bit more. But what it does have is a nice tall flag, so you can spot it from behind the shelves.
@rene The problem with continuing to accept requests, but not acting on them, is that SE can rely on us cleaning up everything once the strike ends, when we "give in".
A strike is not really effective, unless we go completely in. This means that every chat room used for curation/moderating purposes must be put on hold. We must stop flagging things. Moderators must stop handling flags. SD must be shut down. Do not use any sorts of flags, including R/A and spam. This must be clear on Meta.
@Andreasdetestscensorship I suggested redirecting the requests to another place/chatroom outside of SO. I am not sure how easy that'd be and probably requires everyone updating their userscripts.
@KevinB It has to hurt that we temporarily stop curation. And it needs somewhat of a lasting value, sadly. If not, they can do a minimum to get us back, and not be worried to step on us again. Eventually, the fatigue hits us, and we're no longer able to organize large strikes when they harm us.
Yes, however, threatening to harm the community we're fighting for is also counter productive in showing that we are doing this for the community rather than ourselves
@M-- I think it's far more effective if we just abstain from curating completely, which means not using the scripts at all, and not collecting content that must go away.
@KevinB But in which way can we harm the company without harming the community?
I'm not looking for revenge, or to hurt them because I'm angry at them, and just want to see them hurt for the reason of being hurt; I just want the strike to be effective, with a lasting value.
The problem - as I see it - is that the higher-level staff really don't give a flying fling about curation. They just want turnover. Even if all the regular curators, and a good number of high-powered answerers, stop interacting/contributing, there will still be thousands of users who will carry on with their quick-fire answers ... and that's just what the Company wants.
I think it's also telling to some extent that their policy change wasn't featured - so mainly only people active on MSE and mods saw it (I'm sure others did too, but I presume it wasn't featured to minimize people that would see it)
700k rep. users answering duplicates and/or low-quality Qs ... no problem - good for the image of "satisfied customers". ChatGPT posting dodgy code ... again, no problem - the questions are being answered quickly.
get people to care about the problems we're presenting
causing destruction will certainly attract attention, but will it be the correct attention? Refusing to moderate is a direct action that is 100% inline with what we're pushing against, and causes no permanent harm
@Andreasdetestscensorship well if it's stored in a place that SO doesn't have access to (something only accessible by ROs maybe). Then we can decide whether we want to bring them here later on and act on them, or just leave them (long-term damage to the site).
I am not sure if I am for "hurting" them. I'd say what @KevinB said above, is the right course of action.
The site's long-term survival is (hopefully) something that active curators, moderators and conscientious contributors care about but I really doubt that the high-salary, top-level board members do. They want quick megabucks and they'll likely already have plans to sell and move on when the quality and popularity of the site goes face down into the mud.
I did agree with halting our curation efforts here, but not in a way to cause permanent damage. Actually, now that I am considering this more carefully, if the employees want to act on the requests that we post here, be my guest.
Bad publicity (that will happen once all moderators publicly announce strike) will hurt company. I don't think that lack of curation over some time, even if in will be two or even four weeks, will create some irreversible damage. So my belief is that this room should be temporarily converted to read-only. Bots can temporarily diverted to other rooms, so we could later clean up results, if and when everything will comeback to "normal".
Really? I think the media is very interested in bad SO press. A lot of tech journalists have probably had their questions closed and downvoted like everyone else.
@Andreasdetestscensorship Depends on the media channel. Some may have owners who have a grudge against SO or its owners and are just looking for a story to hurt them with.
@markalex I concur - and we can always pick up the slack if the company gives in.
I don't think the strike has much value without major curation rooms going into a read-only mode for a while. There is no damage we can't undo when it ends, but if requests just keep coming... what's the point even?
@IanCampbell As long as it’s not interpreted as «programmers afraid to lose jobs. Programmers believe AI is now sophisticated enough to pose a real threat», etc.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Cody made the argument back during the Monica incident that by closing the room the company might read that as an hostile action that could bring negative consequences at some point in the future.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine the mods, as I see it, individually and as a collective, have a signed agreement and thus have more latitude to take action without suffering repercussion. However much I drift away from SO I still care about SOCVR a lot, and I don't really see a strike by the room adding much to a general mod strike altough I think the room risks negative consequences by associating itself to a mod strike - consequences the mods themselves will be exempt from.
@bad_coder well, it hasn't started yet, and whether curation rooms themselves should go into hiatus is being discussed. Do drop by the strike's dsc, btw :)
@user16217248 del-pls requests are typically for things that won't be deleted otherwise, and usually for things that are particularly bad.
This is because the threshold for casting delete votes is quite high (10k or 20k in some cases) compared to close/reopen or review requests. Further, delete votes are more limited (most users who cast delete votes have 10-15 per day)
@TylerH @user16217248 binned for not being within 1 vote of being deletable at the time of requesting. While you may re-request once it's eligible, I'd recommend against it, due to being scheduled for Roomba-deletion in a little over a week.
@user16217248 I'm not sure if you meant to ask for something else? it sounds like you are thinking that the delete vote count is relevant to whether it is eligible for del-pls, which is not the case
@TylerH Then I am not sure of what you mean by 1 vote of being deletable. Do you mean like downvotes? At first I thought you meant it had to have 2 delete votes already. Maybe that's why I'm confused.
Questions that have been closed for fewer than 48 hours must have a score of -3 or less to be deleted by 20k+ users.
You can request actions on posts that are exactly 1 downvote away from being deletable. At the time that you posted your del-pls request, the question was at 0 score, meaning it was three downvotes away from deletable.
@user16217248 Yes, I mean the post's score. As Ian already mentioned, posts that are closed become eligible for deletion after 48 hours. There are two exceptions: users with 20k+ reputation can cast delete votes immediately after closure if the post's score is at -3 or lower. The second exception is that moderators can always immediately cast a binding delete vote on a closed question, regardless of its score or its closure date (or even whether it is locked).
@IanCampbell brb, making an account on Medical Sciences.SE to ask about brain microchips in the COVID vaccines real quick for you to test this on... :-P
Almost as if we should post ChatGPT-generated answers to their posts about ChatGPT-generated answers to give them a preview as to what they're allowing