@ABcDexter I'm not clear why you tagged PM 2Ring here. The message you link to has nothing to do with your question. Please don't ping people unnecessarily. You can ask your question generally to the room
Back with another dumb question- I added to my code and obviously mistyped something as it has started throwing NameError's saying variables aren't declared but they are- what is a common offender? I have gone through and everything looks indented correctly
What's the better option for creating dimension-based product pricing Option 1: Rule-based algorithm OR option 2: Using Reinforcement learning using trial and error to adjust prices?
trial and error based on market research data and giving the price based on frequently bought dimensions. Ex: suppose you have a banner which you've to customize in that case you can't ask for a base minimum price or maximum price in that case you have to show the price based on customized size.
like there is a process and a function which takes start/stop pictures and the start/stop of the process. Currently it is called take_start_stop_pictures(wanted="start") or similar, but I would like something like take_foo_pictures
I thought of take_edge_pictures, but sounds very odd
@matszwecja I am using VSCode- isnt displaying what the issue is. Will have to deconstruct everything line by line to figure out where the error is coming from
@KarlKnechtel People! When googling to try to find that blog post I didn't find it, but I did find that Google indexes this room's transcript. Are people in general aware of that and ok with it? I think we need to at least mention in the room rules, since some posts here contain personal/work information.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні People sometimes post quite personal or identifiable work or personal stuff. I wasn't aware all this chat is publicly indexed, I doubt everyone else is. Should we at minimum state that in room rules, and also remind people here if they start posting overly personal stuff?
@MisterMiyagi a) Sometimes people here post stuff about employers, or other critical opinions. Just saying. I don't think some of them know. b) These days you also have to assume it is being ingested by GenAI. Researchers have shown how GenAI can be used to deanonymize users. c) I wasn't even thinking of impersonation.
> What is this? It's a real time, persistent collaborative chat for the Stack Overflow community. Only members of Stack Overflow with at least 20 reputation may talk here – but all the conversations are free, open, and public to read by anyone
@smci I was aware of that since day one of using SO/SE for me. It's cool when you get used to it, and it also helps in thoroughly thinking what you want to convey rather than just typing stream of consciousness (at least for me)
@Aran-Fey Kevin is too witty and original for that to happen. At best, maybe variation of existing conversation, but it's easy to spot for anyone that knows him
@smci I mean, even before GenAI, it's pretty obvious that the web is archived and scraped 24/7 (Archive.org, individuals, etc) so it's just usual business
So at least CoPilot can easily find me here, but it totally fails at replicating my dry wit everyone loves to wax on and off and is definitely trippin' on something.
> “Mutating strings? Wax on, wax off! Just remember: str objects are like bonsai trees—prune carefully!”
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні until now I thought SO chatrooms were only available when logged in. And the phrase "but all the conversations are free, open, and public to read by anyone" is nowhere near clear enough: I thought it meant "open to anyone [human], [on condition they register]...". And it does not automatically imply "publicly indexed by Google"; that depends on the robots settings...
I mean, it takes only a couple clicks to notice it is indexed. It's like discovering you can bypass robots.txt file in websites for the first time, it's not that hard to know
User-Agent: *
Allow: /
Disallow: /posts
Disallow: /posts/
Disallow: /tags
Disallow: /tags/
[...]
Wikipedia says:
Some major crawlers support an Allow
directive which can counteract a
following Disallow directive. This is
useful when you disallow an entire
directory but still want s...
Lots of users here have discussed employers, personal stuff, mental health, political or other controversial issues, which they would not want attached to their deanonymized identity, and also implies they were unaware all comments here are indexed by Google. I just double-checked with a lot of searches on various keyword. I'm suggesting that the current room rules text is inadequate, given that GenAI has infinite recall and makes deanonymization trivial...
...It wouldn't be hard to automate a search for "list of users critical of company X/ product Y/politician Z/topic W". I suggest the room rules need amending to say "No expectation of anonymity: be aware all room content is indexed by search engines and hence potentially ingested by GenAI".
Same. It's obvious most of the SO/SE website is public anyway, except for Teams and private chatrooms, so it shouldn't be surprising that public rooms are actually public outside of being logged in
@MisterMiyagi yeah, I'm surprised that you are surprised @smci Also I think most people who post here try to keep things general enough to not be clear what product or business they are talking about
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні something like that would be close, I just wish there was a word that people without math training would understand
@roganjosh It's ok. It wasn't a totally random ping. I originally replied to ABcDexter's questions about migrating Python 2 code to Python 3. Jumping to questions about various async libs is a bit of a leap, but not totally unreasonable.
@Arne Deanonymization (via social network analysis) was already not too hard pre-GenAI, here's one commonly cited 2014 paper: "Community-enhanced de-anonymization of online social networks" - S Nilizadeh, A Kapadia, YY Ahn...
@smci "I thought SO chatrooms were only available when logged in." Yes, you have to be logged in to post to chat, but anyone can read chat. I often use Google to search chat because the internal search is a bit flakey.
... "Our results suggest that even heavily sampled anonymized datasets are unlikely to satisfy the modern standards for anonymization set forth by GDPR and seriously challenge the technical and legal adequacy of the de-identification release-and-forget model."
I don't believe we need to mention in the room info / rules that this room is publicly visible. OTOH, I see no harm in giving people a brief friendly reminder that it's just another part of the public Internet.
@NordineLotfi Multiple users have posted with various keywords that have been flashpoint topics, consider SO's own flashpoint topic of 2019, or other politically hot topics. I rechecked with quite a lot of searches and multiple users might not want their comments attributed to them by name. I'm only pointing this out to help the community, it seems pretty strong evidence users aren't aware of the digital breadcrumbs and the ease with which they can be reidentified...
...And it's not a binary whether a web resource is 'public' or 'private', since bad-faith scrapers can intentionally violate ToS and also robots.txt
@Hakaishin I've found plenty of counterexamples in the room chat.
@smci FWIW, all of my messages are posted knowing full-well that they are indexed and open access. Furthermore, I even invite colleagues to join the chat at times but they just never come back. If they chose to, they could go back through my history. So far, it's never happened. In any case, I'm aware of the possibility
Anyway that's my recommendation; I wasn't aware this room was publicly indexed (such that my search for the StackOverflow blog post only found one hit on the web: this chatroom, but paradoxically not the SO blog post!); and not also covered by a norobots, as a fallback. Consider the recent Glassdoor scandal (on its own users), plus there's a commercial market for deanonymizing Tor or Bitcoin users. It seems prudent to explicitly warn in the room rules. That's all
@Hakaishin oh no, I go full-rant-mode. I'll take any flak that might come from it. I'm careful not to mention names, though
@smci it's not specific to this chat room, though. It's a "feature" of chat. As ROs I don't feel we have any responsibility to tell someone how the internet works. Pertinent information is how we expect people to behave in this room but what you're stating is a fact across the whole SE network of chat
@roganjosh Okay, you're right then there should be a site-wide notice on SO/SE, not these room rules. - I wasn't aware all (non-private) chatrooms were necessarily indexed. (People discuss more intimate stuff in chatrooms than on the main site). Anyway if notice needed to be site-wide, I don't expect SE would care much to do it.
@smci Maybe it should be mentioned somewhere on the MSE chat faq page meta.stackexchange.com/q/271267/334566 There's a link to that page in our room rules, but it's not very prominent.
@roganjosh Old rooms say they're deleted. But you can still read them.
@roganjosh I was sure I'd seen "This room is deleted" messages. But I just checked a few of my old rooms on the stackexchange server, and they just say "This room has been automatically frozen for inactivity"
I think it depends on activity. Eg, if a comment thread gets automatically moved to chat, but nobody ever actually posts in the room, then it gets deleted. I think. ;)
@roganjosh You're misunderstanding my point. Of course I'm not suggesting users should have access to other users' IP addresses; I am pointing that a single mod could reidentify arbitrary users. If SO ever goes down the drain like Glassdoor did two years after it got acquired, weird things can happen. (There was a commercial market in companies manipulating their own Glassdoor reviews, and again taht was happening before GenAI)
@roganjosh Not sure what you mean by "die" but private rooms will be automatically frozen, just like every other chat room. And will be automatically deleted if enough content isn't around. However since private rooms are, typically, for moderators a frozen/deleted room acts like any other. Only problem is, is when your mod room freezes and all the feeds don't work any more.
@smci I think it's in some episode of Charlie Brooker's "Wipe" series (probably a News Wipe episode) where there's a segment of "Oh Gosh" about news reporting. There comes a point where you are so totally helpless to change the outcome of an event that you can literally just say that, and the news morphed into that. Now it's online platforms too. How should I respond to your point?
@Peilonrayz die as in, cleared up and gone from the server
> Things visible to ♦ moderators (of the site where your profile belongs to) only:
real name 1
email 1
your IP address 1
how many days you visited the site (and your current consecutive visits streak)
all the names you used in the last 90 days
1 Moderator access to this information is logged.
So yes, mods can see your IP. But every time they access thst data, it's logged. And the mods generally avoid looking at that info, unless they need to, to catch people doing Bad Things, like evading suspensions, or voting fraud.
@roganjosh I haven't seen that series so I don't know if you're being sarcastic or not, resigned or philosophical or saying it's all outside our control. I'd agree with that, I'm just pointing out the commercial incentives plus ability to bad stuff at scale with GenAI is constantly growing, and Glassdoor is a pretty obvious example of what happens when a online community crashes and burns. Add this to not quite a few users post comments that suggest they're unaware their remarks are indexed.
@PM2Ring I'm sure mod access to that is logged. Can we be sure that SO hasn't provided some AIs access to partial or full IP or derived data? ( for users it thinks aren't covered by GDPR?)
Maybe we'll be the ones to watch this place crash and burn. I really don't know. The trajectory is often right for it. The best I can do is make course corrections where possible
I don't even think they go that far. There's a bool switch after 14 days and that's it. Soon they'll need to migrate to a Data Lakehouse Cum Dinghy and Paddles in the cloud
Frankly, people would be outraged if SE shared that PII even with Prosus, what to speak of other companies outside the group. Allegedly, SE take PII safety pretty seriously; GDPR is just an additional layer on top of the general PII protection policy.
@Fermiparadox, the mods have to sign an agreement before getting their diamonds. Misusing PII can potentially lead to law suits against the mods. (not to mention that even accidentally revealing PII is enough to fire a mod, and has happened once in the past) — Bhargav RaoJan 1, 2020 at 22:50
@smci you're aware that some papers are just exaggerating on their own discovery instead of being truthful? Unless other researcher can reproduce the same result or the code + dataset is open/public, then it might as well be exaggerated.
@smci I mean, this is the case for everything beside SO/SE. People do not usually know how to protect their own identity enough unless they were used to the internet enough to think it through.
@smci Sure, but to a scraper (the individual doing the scraping) it might as well be binary
@smci Zero. These kind of things would be feasible to sniff. Even if SE does not share this information, one should still assume someone can gain access to them.
@NordineLotfi Hey that's a pretty condescending response, I spent a lot of time finding Arne one of the best citations for what he asked for, then you just write this without checking the reputation of that journal (Nature Communications), who the authors are (Yves-Alexandre de Montjoye, Julien Hendrickx), how many years they've published on this topic in high-impact-factor journals. (e.g. "Unique in the Shopping Mall: On the Re-identifiability of Credit Card Metadata", 2015, de Montjoye)
@PM2Ring 1. staff can use mod tools too, do you have a specific sentence saying staff need to approve the actions? 2. Mods can escalate situations to CMs. Are you implying moderators have to escalate redactions to CMs?
@smci I'm sorry if you found that condescending, didn't mean to make it sound like that -- but I didn't take into account the journal where it was published when saying that. This is just a longer version of "taking with a grain of salt", which I apply to most papers unless the research was reproduced by others and/or code+dataset is public.
@PM2Ring Sorry "approve" is a Freudian slip from the redaction process. I think we can safely replace the word to what you believe is the correct word.
I knew that mods can get stuff redacted. And sometimes that needs to happen quickly, eg when someone accidentally posts personal info. But I thought that just makes the info invisible to anyone viewing the site (including 10k+ people & mods), and that a final step was needed to actually delete it.
@PM2Ring From how janky mod tools are. And the UI of the redaction process. I'm confident (but not certain) the edit happens live on the data in the database.
(I'm grossly oversimplifying the process, but we don't need a CM unless we need to redact an image - formerly from imgur, and now from the internal image store)
yeah but accounts shouldn't hence be part of the backup
otherwise a nefarious employee could just look there to see your history after deletion. Delete account should rewrite all logs.
It's a pain, I just had to make that for my company and making that performant took me well over a few weeks to test and implement.
As "sometimes" there's still a business viable reason (ie accountant stuff) to keep it several years, so you have to remember that a request was made and then after that period has passed update your logs. (as for other rules logs need to be available well over the 2 year, but then can be anonymized).
@paul23 I've not used the GDPR tools, and the tool seems broken for me. GDPR and account deletion are two separate processes. I think most GDPR requests are handled to a degree by a person. meta.stackexchange.com/q/340953