Can somebody please relay a message to @mousetail on Discord, that it’s not possible to sign the letter with an SE account? Only SO accounts work, but the strike concerns the entire network.
@Mithical @M-- Thanks. :) I’d do it myself, but I’m supposed to sleep now, so I don’t have Discord available. The effort it takes to open Discord (open a big chunky computer, etc), will make me unable to sleep for a while.
But it’ll be nice to have a response in the comment section stating this is a bug on our part.
@M-- Also, I didn’t intend to hijack your chance of making the response. :( Sorry about that.
If you have a better one to write, replace mine. :P
@Mithical would the title of the meta post be better as "moderation strike" instead of "moderator strike"? This way it'd more immediately encompass also curators who don't have a diamond but are effectively striking
@Mithical I respectfully disagree. A significant amount of the moderation is done by the community, and the community should ideally get behind this more
@Andreasdetestscensorship they have a github repo for the site so probably open an issue there github.com/mousetail/openletter
They need to reproduce (with John Agar) They need to reproduce (with Morris Ankrum) They need to reproduce (with Richard Basehart) They need to reproduce (with Jackie Coogan) They need to reproduce (with Sonny Tufts)
Btw, before I get off, some Meta posts misrepresent the AI content moderation we have been doing, such as this one. If somebody would be so nice as to point out that we don’t rely on the detectors, that would be nice.
Minor nitpick: While this is correct:
announced that the use of AI-detection tooling to identify AI/LLM generated content for the purposes of deletion/bannning is now banned
I'd add two points:
At least on Stack Overflow, we've not been using any automated detector as a primary (or for most/al...
Also, one more thing: has it been considered adding a separate list of signers, one you can add yourself to without having an SE account, to show support for the cause? There’s lots of SE users without accounts.
I just wish we could better reach out to all the still active curators and answerers on the main sites, that have developed banner blindness over the Meta links in the sidebar.
Also, please force me off of here if I soon don’t get some damn sleep.
the indicators that I had upvoted a post disappeared when I made an edit of that post; I think I have noticed this previously, after the elevator buttons were introduced
With a strange feeling I sent our beloved pets, the dog, the cat, the dinosaur, the little fire elemental and the bee on holiday now. They earned it. Maybe we get picture post cards.
I can't remember which one it was, but there was an emoji that seemed to convey vastly different messages on different OSes. Windows and Linux. Like one would definitely look sadder while the oner would be happy or something. Made for some really mixed communication until some screenshots clarified the confusion.
Oh there is also Outlook which at least in the past didn't use emojis exactly. I've not verified if it's still the case but used to be that you might notice some emails suspiciously ended with "J" when the sender neither has that as an initial, nor does it make any sense for it to be there. Turns out, if you put a smiley ":)" in an Outlook email, it gets converted to an emoticon but actually rendered as "J" if the email is not read in Outlook.
In Outlook it just stays as smiley. This has also been a great source of confusion. I only learned about this from an old boss of mine. He used to get emails from somebody who used smileys often yet my boss only read the "J" in the emails. At some point he wondered if it was meant as "joke"/"joking" which was quite inappropriate where it showed up. Imagine reading "I need this feature. Joking!" The person emailing also had no clue what my boss was on about when asked about the "J"s.
They weren't very computer literate and probably couldn't have imagined that the smiley gets swapped for a different thing.
@NordineLotfi The problem is that it wasn't actually an emoji which is a real character. Just MS going off and making their own thing that they impose onto others.
@VLAZ-onstrike- to be fair a computer literate person would probably also not suspect that emoticons would be swapped with the letter J, because it would be nuts to implement it that way.
Speaking of, another annoying thing with Outlook: at some point it introduced an option to not delete messages read via POP3 (where the protocol is basically "download and delete from server", IMAP is "leave on server"). Not only was this an option but also on by default. Just hidden away in the settings where nobody looks. Nor anybody bothers to check for new settings after update. In particular, that was a problem because we provided email boxes for our users but with 10-50MB space.
The idea was that they'll just use POP3 to get and clean up the emails. So the limited space was more than enough. That was a soft-cap, though and one day we start getting a multitude of alarms of breached quotas from all over the place. It didn't make any sense why suddenly bunch of different users stopped checking their emails.
@RyanM-Regenerateresponse MS never fails to disappoint on that front...
@blackgreen Nice, hopefully it should be covered by different tech blogs and some forums (maybe even reddit by now)
@VLAZ-onstrike- I never used POP3 but on gmail, when you use IMAP, you can delete/etc server side too? (unless you meant that by default it doesn't do that contrary to POP3 which does?)
@VLAZ-onstrike- that's an oversight on their part :/ I don't think emails take that much space, unless you have a lot of embedded stuff in them (or you use them as encrypted chat which is pretty rare)
@NordineLotfi OK, my explanation was simplistic. In essence you have the server and it has your emails. You can connect via POP3 or IMAP. POP3 will download all messages from the server and delete them. So "moves" them to your machine. It works OK if you only want a single client to read the emails. If you connect a second client via POP3, you won't be able to get the previous emails. IMAP will leave them on the server after retrieval, so you can connect more clients and still read the same emails.
You can still explicitly delete from the server, though.
@RyanM-Regenerateresponse ah, yeah I forgot the general consensus there is to "hate" SO...does it show I'm not an actual user on the site? :P (I do browse it without an account though)
@NordineLotfi It's not just "oversight" but a breach of the POP3 protocol. MS do a lot of this. Less nowadays but used to be a MO for them to deliberately not follow a protocol so things would only work in a MS to MS applications but other ones that do follow the protocol might be incompatible.
@VLAZ-onstrike- got you. That was what I understood too when I used IMAP but I mostly used it with mutt client (or neomutt) so I never really delved in the semantics
@VLAZ-onstrike- ah, so that's how they "embrace extend extinguish". The "extend" part is just there to cause chaos
@RyanM-Regenerateresponse yeah, but given the Youtube landscape when it comes to SO, I wouldn't be surprised if the general sentiment is overall 50%+ negative on Reddit
There has apparently been an instance where Windows machines put on a network could bring down the network for all other computers. There is this thing with a three-way handshake. A message is sent from machine 1 to machine 2, then machine 2 returns an acknowledgement, then machine 1 sends back an acknowledgement of the acknowledgement. This ensures all party are ready to communicate.
The final acknowledgement is technically probably not needed but is there to safeguard from some weird network cases. Well, MS decided to omit it. It wastes network bits. Which, like, it works. Sort of. Except all non-Windows machines will then be hanging waiting for the final ack.
I can't remember the specifics. It's something I heard from a network administrator. But if I were to extrapolate from my knowledge, I'd guess machine 2 (when it's Linux) would wait for a while, then drop the communication channel but the Windows machine might re-initiate the three-way handshake because it recognised "channel is closed but I still need to send this data. Let's just retry".
@NordineLotfi Eh, emails don't take that much space is true but also that was back in 2010 where space was at least moderately expensive. Still cheap but we had a lot of clients that had emails. Might have been 100. All of them relatively small but still - we provided them with a brochure website and contact. Stuff like B&Bs or people who had a small business and such. There wouldn't be a huge volume of emails but it'd be somewhat consistent.
There wasn't THAT much space on the server to give them each, say, 100MB. That would be 10GB of space overall. While we could have gotten another server for all the emails (we did have one but only for "special" clients) it's still extra expenses and maintenance.
@VLAZ-onstrike- you can solve this by plugging a network cable from one switch port into another to treat the first ack as the third ack by replaying it </bad-advice>
@RyanM-Regenerateresponse Also bad advice. Background - when you make a DNS request, you should try the closest DNS first (e.g., local machine), then if that fails, the next one up the chain (e.g., local network), if not the next one (e.g., network that hosts the local one), etc., until you get to the root DNS nodes. It's all hierarchical to make sure the DNS request is handled as local as possible.
Bad advice time: you can also just directly make all your DNS requests to the root DNS nodes. Of which there are, like seven in total. In the world. Maybe you'll guess why I'm mentioning this in the context of MS doing "misdeeds". Hint: they did that at one point.
Effectively attempting a DDOS on the root DNS nodes. It didn't get to be a denial of service but also if it happened today it might be with a lot more devices online.
@RyanM-Regenerateresponse MS never fails to disappoint on that front...
Onto a different topic altogether: I use Feedly and it seems to have a very similar problem as the notifications on SE. Clicking on a notification is not at all guaranteed to actually click on it. I middle-click to open in a new window and often I have to keep middle-clicking all over the place to get it to actually trigger. It's almost like a hidden pixel hunt at times. Notifications kind of have that, as well. In fairness it works more often with notifications.
@E_net4isonstrike I just disable the thing when I need to use something. Mostly, it's to click "edit" on the StackApps post. Because I can't just hit E with the keyboard shortcuts to edit it. That doesn't work if you don't have full edit privileges. Yes, even on your own posts. Yes, it's dumb. Yes, it's also reported as a bug.
Editing on meta sites
On per-site Meta pages, you cannot edit most posts until you get the full edit privilege. Trying to edit one shows this message:
Suggested edits are not allowed on non-tag-wiki posts on meta sites.
Thus while you can only do suggested edits, on per-site Metas that can only...
@markalex The list of "Hot Meta Posts" is regenerated every hour. All questions tagged [discussion], not tagged with ay mod-only tag (e.g., a status tag), scoring 3 or more, and that are not older than 3 days are eligible to be "Hot Meta Posts". Full criteria are here:
First off, yes: it can be raised. Right now, the "watermark" is 3:
...the rest of the space is filled with hot discussion questions not marked status-completed, scoring at least 3 and posted within the past two weeks. These are picked semi-randomly. At least one of these will always be added ...
Like Zoe says, there is a way for mods (which would include staff with mod privileges) to forcibly remove a question from being in Hot Meta Posts, and this would prevent it from ever being chosen again, but that does show up in the question's revision history, so it would leave an obvious trace.
Right, yes, of course not. But the way the site works is, mod privileges are mod privileges. CMs who have been given mod privileges have diamonds and "Mod" flair after their usernames. So they can do anything we mods can do.
Now for some fun: a straw poll. Which avatar should I change to during the strike? The idea is to have a smashed/broken version of the glasses, conveying what staff has done to us all. One; Two; Three; Four
Was the prohibition to feature strike announcements preemptive, or the was such an announcement somewhere on the network featured and later removed by staff, and this ban being created as a result?
> Brains are just very dangerous to mess with because they are extremely essential to our existence - despite what watching Congress might make you think
Any estimation on how long it might take for SO to be not-useful?
Stack overflow has like 1e8 questions so depends on the rate of spam it might take a long time...? (which is... maybe not very good for the strike...?)
@user202729 that's not really relevant; search (e.g. through an off-site search engine) will always find content, rather than spam. The problem lies much more in the ratio of useful content to spam being posted. If 10 spam posts come in for every relevant post, new questions won't be visible and thus answered as much
Actually... I wonder if we should put a "Generously hosted by mousetail" somewhere on the page, not only to thank him, but also in case anyone else is wondering that same thing.
@Adriaan Well yes but... I feel the "real" value of SO nowadays just the historical collection of questions anyway? I feel the flood of questions makes it almost impossible for questions to be answered anyway
@user202729 depends. If you're looking for help on issues with "old" (older than a few years) programming languages, yes, the historical collection is the way to go. However, if your new android version borks again, that will be impacted.
... but I won't be raising any new flags, for a while, either. Maybe if I come across something that is really horrendously rude/abusive I would raise a red flag, because I don't want to let bigots/racisist/homophobes/etc. run free. But I saw a spam post earlier on and decided that the only action I would take was to "follow" it. (Deleted after about 15 mins - Smokey would have seen to it in 2 or 3 mins.)
@AdrianMole Yeah, same. I still care about the platform, and I don't want the really horrible stuff around. But that should hopefully (I beg of you, whoever is reading the chat log) be very rare.
With this moderation break I need something to throw my free time into so I decide to drive myself crazy and do the bobsangles mod pack for factorio. That should eat all of my extra hours
@Andreasdetestscensorship You haven't heard about it because they said it privately to specifically striking mods. Well, a subset of striking mods, because all communication between the company and striking mods has so far been awfully inefficiently handled. — Zoe stands with Ukraine ♦6 mins ago
@user202729 Staff has been consistently unfeaturing any strike notices that have been featured across the network. So, yes, that's correct. Also, mods that are on strike are not going to be featuring anything anyway.
@user202729 Basically, yes. Staff's position is that there's no way to accurately determine whether something is AI-generated, which means that all enforcement of the policy leads to false positives, so they've told us that we cannot enforce it. However, they haven't changed the policy that use of AI generators is banned. In fact, they've made clear that they continue to support that policy. And, either way, it remains the official policy of moderators, so we're leaving it featured.
hmm, clicking on meta is giving me a It was not possible to perform this tag search at this time due to an unexpected error. error instead of the recent asctivity
Do you have any real, verifiable evidence that the Milky Way has a population that is different from the World, or just a vague heuristic likely to yield a false positive result that will be biased against space aliens?
I'm not Javascript-savvy enough to figure out how to fix the open letter authorization being Stack Overflow only instead of any SE account; but they have accepted two of my PRs today so they are definitely receptive to that sort of contribution
@Mast the unfeaturing was by accident, not the refeaturing. This specific post does not mention, nor is about the strike. Only posts about the strike are unfeatured
FWIW Philippe is open about his lack of understanding of the interface in some cases. On the upside, I give him credit for doing it directly rather than sending a CM to do a VP's job
I still feel bad about the time I had Cat re-apply a suspension I accidentally lifted. Someone was sitting on a multi-year network-wide suspension and I fumbled it.
@blackgreenonstrike As an overthinker who is the father of three overthinkers... yep :)
@Andreasdetestscensorship No, we were warned (albeit in the most roundabout unituitive way). And I knew we wouldn't get away with featuring posts about the strike on SO
@cigien Meh. I wish they'd just come out and said it generally for all the mods (striking or not). Instead it turned into this cloak-and-dagger double-secret-handshake things. It sowed more confusion doing it that way
Most of it was common sense things. Namely that we can't promote the strike directly (which has never been acceptable). We also can't abuse our diamonds.
I don't see any reason you can't dupe hammer things. There are no union thugs who will come up and say things like "Nice gold badge ya got there. It's be a shame if someone capped yer knee if you used it".
@tripleee So Philippe claims the title is deceptive, which it in fact is not, while at the same time, he himself made an entire dishonest and deceptive post about the AI policy? Ok? Maybe take a look inwards?
@NathanOliver My view is that we're not going to help the network clean itself up. But dupe hammers are also useful to the question poster. It's one of those grey areas. If you think it's more helpful to the network itself, don't do it
> A small number of moderators (11%) across the Stack Overflow network have stopped engaging in several activities, [...] Stack Overflow ran an analysis and the ChatGPT detection tools that moderators were previously using have an alarmingly high rate of false positives. Usage of these tools correlated to a dramatic upswing in suspensions of users with little or no prior content contributions; people with original questions and answers were summarily suspended from participating on the platform
Interesting that they have a concrete number for moderators going on strike and not for the number of people that were allegedly suspended inappropriately.
> Stack Overflow ran an analysis and the ChatGPT detection tools that moderators were previously using have an alarmingly high rate of false positives. Usage of these tools correlated to a dramatic upswing in suspensions of users with little or no prior content contributions; people with original questions and answers were summarily suspended from participating on the platform. These unnecessary suspensions and their outsize impact on new users run counter to our mission and have a negative impact on our community.
And how was the 11% calculated? It provides a twisted perception anyway, considering that SO is the site with the most need for moderation and the percentage is way higher on SO in specific.
Based on this response from CEO, I have a feeling that they tested huggingface, found it's bug that @CodyGray-onstrike described recently, and decided that there clearly no other reasons those pesky mods banning out nice new users.
So far, this is the closest thing that we have to an official response from the company, found in an article on Dev Class.
In a statement sent to Dev Class, Stack Overflow’s CEO Prashanth
Chandrasekar told us:
“A small number of moderators (11%) across the Stack Overflow network
have stopped eng...
There seems to some confusion between the various 'news' articles linked about which staff member said what. Like the paragraph, "A small number of moderators (11%) across the Stack Overflow network ..." According to one, it was the CEO; on another site, it was Phillippe. Or is Phillippe the new CEO? xD
ugh... this strike comes at a bad time for me, we just started out 4-40 summer schedule... (4 days @ 10 hours instead of 5 days @ 8 hours) no curating to keep me awake :P