We are all programmers here, and usually that means we're capable of figuring out a lot of complicated things on our own.
Sadly, there are times when a combination of pride / ignorance blinds a person to grasping that they are in way over their head when answering a question.
These people assume that because they use foo technology on a daily basis, that somehow makes them an expert on the intricate details of how foo worksNote 1. Usual symptoms:
- The person invents new definitions to technical terms after you tell them their answer is wrong.
- Extended comment war where they introduce even more "innovative thinking" in response to any evidence you have citedNote 2
- Upvoting your downvotes on another person's wrong answer.
Questions:
There are times when the technical details are lost on an audience and you hope to save the OP from the savages of another person's ignorance (and hopefully prevent future damage of the same variety).
- What is the most effective, and socially acceptable way to tell someone they are completely unqualified to answer questions on a subject after they have resisted your subtle attempts to show them the light?Note 2
- Bonus, is there some internet meme, or video that is appropriate?
FOOTNOTES
- For example, everyone uses Ethernet, but most of people don't know (or need to know) that Ethernet has an unframed serialization / deserialization protocol underneath it. That's fine until one day a person asks how to send raw serial over unframed ethernet, and people who have no grasp of the issues try to answer the question (and get upvoted because their answer sounds right). This certainly isn't the most egregious example I could cite of the behavior. It just illustrates the point that you can use technologies every day and still be naively overconfident about what's really happening under the hood.
- Changing IP address before web page reads it


