According to http://meta.stackoverflow.com/reputation, I lost a lot of rep in the 10hrs this day is old in Greenwich:

** rep today: -102

According to the rep page, this is due to -100 to question 105897, which doesn't exist. Of course, http://meta.stackoverflow.com/users/133368/sbi?tab=reputation makes no mention of this.

So where did my rep go?

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62% accept rate
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It looks like you were hit with a spam/offensive flag deletion which removes 100 reputation as well as deleting the post. – ChrisF Sep 12 '11 at 8:59
Maybe this helps ... – takrl Sep 12 '11 at 8:59
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As ChrisF already mentioned, the -100 rep looks suspiciously like the effect of an offensive/spam flagged post that was removed. A spam/offensive flag also carries an automatic downvote, so a mod-superflag would result in -102 rep, as far as I understand the flag mechanism. – Mad Scientist Sep 12 '11 at 9:06
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Dropping the F bomb in a recent question you asked probably had a lot to do with it. Profanity turns almost any post into flypaper for flags. – Tim Post Sep 12 '11 at 9:07
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@Fabian: No, the -2 are explained by me downvoting two answers. It's the -100 I was after. – sbi Sep 12 '11 at 9:59
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Lemme just add this: Removing rep from a user - for whatever reason I don't want to go into in this comment - but not showing this on the user's rep timeline reeks. Badly. – sbi Sep 12 '11 at 9:59
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I also "lost" nearly 100 on question that got about 14 upvotes and was zapped by Jeff. So I'm totally with you on this matter.. – Sha Dow Wiz Ard Sep 12 '11 at 11:46
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@Shadow: Never mind the rep, but his reaction is complete nonsense. If Jeff objected (as hilarious as this is in itself) to the use of that word in a phrase that was not directed at anyone, he could have just edited the question and move one. There are certainly other ways to express what I said. (It just never occured to me to not to use the phrase that is, IME, most commonly used among the professionals who frequent this site). No, I think that question was deleted because Jeff he didn't didn't like what it said (rather than how), and those -100 were simply meant as a punishment. – sbi Sep 12 '11 at 13:46
In your case, it's the community fault not Jeff. As far as I remember, it takes five spam flags to mark post as spam, delete it and remove 100 rep, all automatically. I doubt that Jeff triggered this manually, more likely 5 members flagged your question. – Sha Dow Wiz Ard Sep 12 '11 at 17:17
@Shadow: As you see from the comments to Pekka's answer, not everyone reading the "offending" sentence it even noticed it. (It is a common thing to say, after all.) So I think it would take rather a lot of users to gain five flags. But that question didn't have much time for users to even look at it, let alone read down far enough down to find the "offense". I doubt many ever noticed it, and even less of them will have flagged. Of course, I have no way to check, but the above leads me to seriously doubt it had enough flags besides Jeff's. – sbi Sep 12 '11 at 17:29
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1 Answer

up vote 9 down vote accepted

Your question was spam or offensive flagged, probably because of the use of the f word.

(Not that I would regard that flag-worthy in that specific context - "...we f-ed up on this small detail...". Just stating the facts.)

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Do you have a reference of him using the f-word? I remember reading the question a few times and I would definitely reacted on that word. The short snippet of text shown in googles search-results doesn't indicate this either. – aioobe Sep 12 '11 at 9:18
@aioobe "...we f*ed up on this small detail..." I overread it, too. Only Tim's comment made me aware of it – Pekka Sep 12 '11 at 9:19
Ah, hm, It rings a bell when you put it as a quote. Good catch. – aioobe Sep 12 '11 at 9:20
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And if I had written "We failed, the question wouldn't have been deleted?! Haha, that is so ridiculous! LMAO over here. As if any developer ever said it this way to his fellow - even in the country where that word is constantly used, but just as constantly denied to be used. Well, and the beauty of it all is, that only 0.01% of all users can check whether this is actually right. This, meta, is a madhouse, and my nose is rubbed in it every time I poke it in here. – sbi Sep 12 '11 at 9:49
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Oh, and for the benefit of the 99.99% of meta users who cannot see the question that got deleted: The word was used in a totally inoffensive way, in a question that asked, politely, if I may say so, to not to delete questions that were relevant, even if that relevance had since diminished. Oh, the irony. – sbi Sep 12 '11 at 9:53
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Although, like Pekka, I wouldn't have flagged such a comment - you've been around for a while, @sbi. Were you not aware of SE's profanity policy (linked from the community FAQ)‌​? – Michael Petrotta Sep 12 '11 at 16:26
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@Michael: I am living in a culture where we do not pretend to not to be using the words we are using. TTBOMK, the expression I used is regularly used between developers to refer to failures, so I used it without even thinking about it. Again: Like so many here, I didn't grow up in a culture that denies using their most-used swear word. I try to adjust, but not having it ingrained I keep forgetting. – sbi Sep 12 '11 at 17:22
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Also, if that was offensive to anybody, but they could have just gone and fixed it without deleting the question. That is why I wrote what I wrote in my comment to the question. – sbi Sep 12 '11 at 17:23
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