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I am currently still banned from posting questions on SO (even though my rep has increased more than a 100 points and I now have vote down privilege), and at least one of the questions I see hurting me I find unrecoverable. Since I can't fix it, and it won't help to delete, would it be ok for me to "edit" the question by deleting everything and asking a different question? Because it is extremely inconvenient for me to be banned like this (not even being throttled, just plain banned), and after having been picked for best answer recently , editing one of my questions and making it better, and trying to make another one of my questions better (but apparently failing), and making multiple accepted edits to other people's questions, but still not having the ban lifted, my only choices at this point are using one of the down-voted questions to contain a new separate unrelated question, or making a new account. So would it be ok for me to replace the entire content of one question with something else, and change the tags?

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  • The impression I've gotten is that completely changing a question is frowned upon, especially if there are already answers to that question. For questions without comments or answers (and preferably a low view-count), I suppose you'd have more leeway, but I'd still tread carefully.
    – awksp
    Jul 10, 2014 at 22:54
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    No. You're not allowed to deface your questions by removing all of the content for any reason. Neither is making a new account to get past the ban, and if you're caught doing so you can make things much worse for yourself (like having your IP address banned). Your choice at this point are to follow the instructions in this post and get yourself unbanned in the proper manner.
    – Ken White
    Jul 10, 2014 at 22:54
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    Also, if it's "extremely inconvenient" for you to be banned now, it would probably be even more extremely inconvenient if you were permanently banned for attempting to circumvent the ban.
    – Ken White
    Jul 10, 2014 at 23:02
  • I'm checking some stuff out for you right now, give me a day or two...
    – user456814
    Jul 10, 2014 at 23:19
  • @KenWhite there's actually a new anti-recidivism system in place that will throttle people who create new accounts (as a second chance), though I think it will still ban you completely if you screw up the second time. At least, that's what I think I've heard. The new systems are kind of complicated to understand. I'm trying to get in touch with some people who might be able to clear some things up...
    – user456814
    Jul 10, 2014 at 23:27
  • @justcool393: I provided a link to what the OP (and anyone else in this position) is supposed to do. Can you not see it? It's in the last line of my first comment; the words this post are a link. I also addressed the reasons the OP is not supposed to create a new account in the same comment.
    – Ken White
    Jul 11, 2014 at 0:24
  • @justcool393: The OP specifically asked about the points I commented on in my previous comments (removing the content from an existing question and creating a new account to bypass the ban). I've also addressed the poster feeling held back. I'm not sure what you're debating here. Are you not reading what I've written? The proper behavior is to follow the steps to get the ban lifted; if you've ignored the signs that you were about to be banned (and there are warnings before it happens), then it's too bad if it's inconvenient for you while you take steps to get the ban lifted.
    – Ken White
    Jul 11, 2014 at 0:33
  • @justcool393: You really seem to be having difficulty reading the words I write. Where did I say it was "hard to create a new account"? I said that creating a new account to avoid a question ban would not be the proper way to do it, and that just creating a new account repeatedly and then continuing the same type of behavior would just end up getting your account (or IP) banned in the future. It would be pretty pointless to ban someone, allow them to repeatedly create new accounts only to get them banned, and never do anything to stop that behavior. The proper solution is to get it lifted.
    – Ken White
    Jul 11, 2014 at 1:44
  • @justcool393: That is answered in the post I linked. There's no specific way explained to do it, just like there's no specific information about exactly what causes a ban to finally happen. If that information was public, people could abuse it by just skirting the edge of being banned, or by just barely doing enough to have it lifted. The process of getting a ban lifted is difficult intentionally, because it's intended as a minor punishment for repeated poor behavior. If you allow people to simply sneak around the ban, it's useless. You work to get it lifted, and then don't do it again.
    – Ken White
    Jul 11, 2014 at 1:58
  • @cluemein I left some comments on how to improve one of your questions. If you address those satisfactorily, I think the question would be much improved, and would get up votes / may be reopened. Jul 11, 2014 at 4:13
  • Ok, I added some things including some example code.
    – cluemein
    Jul 11, 2014 at 15:36
  • NO. Unsure why you would even ask this question, the it's fairly obvious what the answer is.
    – AStopher
    Jan 7, 2015 at 9:10

2 Answers 2

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Are you allowed to completely change your question just so you can ask a question:

No

However, I'm sure people have tried and some have probably gotten away with it.

But, if you do try it, it is more likely that you'll be caught and your edit will be rolled back. And the act of editing your question twice (once for your edit and once for the rollback) will bump your question twice and get it that much more attention, and it is just as likely that you'll only push yourself even further into the ban with more downvotes.

And given all of your current questions have answers, it is much more likely you will get caught since changing the question will completely invalidate the existing answers and they will be a giant arrow point at your edit (which will probably bring more negative attention. And you'll also could inadvertently subject your previous answerers to downvotes as well, so their answer no longer answers the question at hand.

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No

Any attempt to circumvent the question ban may make your situation much worse, if you get caught.

Note that you have the possibility to ask for lifting the ban, for example based on your positive activity on other sites (I don't know how unusual it is, but as for me, it's the possibility to prove you have learned from your mistakes).

However, attempting to circumvent the ban will be a black card in your history, and you could forget about any special treatment, and risk even complete ban.

The edits that completely alter the question are considered vandalism.

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