I think currently most of the confusion around the timelines is the 5-minute grace period? I haven't read through the whole scrollback but it seems to be the message I got from where I read up to.
Okay, so, in order to reduce revision "spam" from minor post fixes, in general, all edits made within 5 minutes of a new revision entry will be "coalesced" into the same revision.
There are exceptions to this. For example, if someone comments on your post and then you edit it, a new revision will be made even if within 5 minutes. This is interpreted to mean that you fixed your post based on feedback.
and with the caveat that I didn't get much more than a once-over before it was gone, the similarities between Julia's post and his were uncanny and I was curious if that's visible or whatnot
So, here's the deal. According to the timeline data, their edit happened 1 minute after your post. Of course, both you and they have a 5-minute grace period, so there's no telling what edits happened within those 5 minutes.
Well, nothing doing shmooing, we already hashed out what's doing and everybody agreed etc. right? I'm curious how much similarity there was initially and what the delta was
all i know is a saw Editing under his post what seemed like a few minutes after my first post. Because of the five minute rule there is nothing to prove that he saw my first post considerably sooner than the minute the record shows.
I'd like to look at them, and draw my own (anecdotal) conclusions ;) if that's even possible. It's pretty much a matter of personal curiosity for me since the matter is settled between Julia and him
and I'd like to see for myself whether, just based on basically code review like a merge conflict, if my human interpretation would support Julia's conclusion. Is this possible?
Again I really appreciate your help and understanding in the matter.
I mean from now on I'll have to record my screen everytime I work on an SO solution so I can report potential misuse for visual confirmation of timeline but that doesn't seem ideal.
For a post to get deleted, at least 3 very-high-rep users (20k+) must vote to delete it, or else a moderator must delete it, or at least 6 or so users have to flag the post as spam.
Users with 10k+ rep can see who deleted a post. In fact, in your third link, it already says who deleted it.
(I'll be honest, cky - mods usually side against us. Stridently and vociferously, usually. That's been my experience. Doesn't seem to matter why or what.)
@satyrwilder That's unfortunate to hear. I've been a moderator (on a different Stack Exchange site) for 4 years before I joined the company, and I've had very pleasant interactions with pretty much all the mods I interact with. I understand I come from a place of great privilege, so I'm always keen to hear other perspectives, and find where we (the company) can improve things.
I mean it would also be nice to get some notifications as a participant of the question as to why things are deleted and who is deleting them so you can contact them.
So I wound up accusing the only participating high rep user I see.
Yeah, the inability to see that somebody else who will almost certainly get the accept by virtue of repglare is kind of mean, tbh. The odds we're just wasting our time - especially when somebody with several orders of magnitude more rep can just arbitrary crown themselves the winner because [reason]
I mean, it's pretty much impossible to convince women to participate actively on stack because the barriers to participation are stacked so neatly and so high.
But, the peanut gallery in that other chat - Chango, Jill, etc. They can't participate in chat because their rep's not high enough. Considering that Julia can be technically right and still be declared the loser because [reason], we resort to childish rep games just to help them be able to -watch- :/
And having to ping friends and hope they're online, available and in a sympathetic mood, etc. :/
and none of these are issues you can address but I just had to get them off my chest.
@JuliaAnneJacobs I don't know who New Dev is. The community team can probably tell whether that's a sock for someone else, though it's not common to find a 10k+ sock.
Well, I would say you are. Some of the people from that other chat - high rep, I don't recognize, left vague, critical feedback that seemed to coincide with your answer being downvoted.
A sockpuppet is an online identity used for purposes of deception. The term, a reference to the manipulation of a simple hand puppet made from a sock, originally referred to a false identity assumed by a member of an Internet community who spoke to, or about, themselves while pretending to be another person. The term now includes other misleading uses of online identities, such as those created to praise, defend or support a person or organization, or to circumvent a suspension or ban from a website. A significant difference between the use of a pseudonym and the creation of a sockpuppet is that...